mezzisahs

Old High German

Etymology

An old compound mezzi- +β€Ž sahs, cognate with Old English meteseax, metsax, from Proto-Germanic *matisahsΔ… (β€œfood-knife”). The Gothic equivalent would be (unattested) *matisahs, compare to attested πŒΌπŒ°π„πŒΉπŒ±πŒ°πŒ»πŒ²πƒ (matibalgs, β€œfood-bag”). In origin the knife used for cutting food while working, hunting or travelling, which doubled as a defensive weapon.

The compound was obscured at an early time, within the Old High German period, which suggests frequent use. The original mezzi-sahs is first reduced to mazsahs (Old Saxon mezas, Low German metz, mess, mest). The form containing -r- then appears still in the Old High German period, as mezzirahs which via mezzarehs, mezziras, mezzeres becomes mezzer. Middle High German has mezzer virtually exclusively; but compare a 12th-century Rhenish mez-sehs, whence r-less forms in contemporary Central Franconian (see Metz, MÀß).

Noun

mezzisahs n

  1. knife

Descendants

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