Reconstruction:Proto-Sino-Tibetan/p-wap
Proto-Sino-Tibetan
editEtymology
edit- Proto-Sino-Tibetan: ?
- Proto-Tibeto-Burman: *p-wap (Matisoff, STEDT), *r/s/p-wap (Matisoff, 2003)
The aspirated initial of Old Chinese 肺 (OC *pʰobs, “lung”) is probably due to sound symbolism and it indicates breathing (Schuessler, 2007). Compare Proto-Vietic *pʰoːc (“lung”), possibly from an earlier *p-hoːc < *p-soːs / *p-hoːs, with an original fricative coda, as Vietnamese phổi and Chut soh seem to suggest (Ferlus, 2007). Similar examples of sound symbolism for words having to do with “breathing” and “wind” are also recognizable in Indo-European languages, cf. Sanskrit फुप्फुस (phupphusa, “lungs”), connected with Sanskrit फुत्कार (phutkāra, “to blow, hiss”), from the root Sanskrit फुत् (phut, “to blow”); and Ancient Greek φυσάω (phusáō, “to blow, puff”), from Ancient Greek φῦσα (phûsa, “bellows”).
Tibetan གློ་བ (glo ba, “lungs”) may be derived from Proto-Sino-Tibetan *g-lwa-p, an allofamic variant of this root (Matisoff, 2003), but it might also be a loan from Sanskrit क्लोमन् (kloman, “(right) lung”).
See also Proto-Tai *pwɤtᴰ (“lung”), whence Thai ปอด (bpɔ̀ɔt) and Zhuang bwt, where the presence of the medial *-w- is explained by the fact that this word was borrowed in PT when it was already pronounced as *pʰuɑs (Pittayaporn, 2009).
Noun
edit*p-wap
Descendants
edit- Old Chinese: 肺 /*pʰot-s/ (B-S), /*pʰobs/ (ZS) ("lung")