πππππππππ
Umbrian
Etymology
An *-Δ-nos adjective, most likely Literally, βof or relating to Trebulaβ, the name of a village, the root of which is shared in Latin trabs (βwooden beamβ) and Oscan [Term?] (βhouseβ).[1] The root is found in many Italic place names; this one is possibly Trebula Suffenas or Trebula Mutusca, both in the Sabina[2] or alternatively what is now called Troppola, 9 km northeast of Iguvium, now a frazione in the modern comune of Gubbio.[3] Only attested in the masculine plural.
Adjective
πππππππππ β’ (treplanes) (early Iguvine) (ablative masculine plural)
- Trebulan. only used referring to with π
ππππ m pl (veres, βgateβ), to refer to the βTrebulan gateβ.
- Lua error in Module:utilities at line 142: attempt to perform arithmetic on local 'h' (a nil value)
Attested forms
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References
- De Vaan, Michiel (2008), βtrabs, -sβ, in Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill, βISBN, page 626
- Poultney, James Wilson (1959) The Bronze Tables of Iguvium, page 2: βThe name of the third gate [β¦] contains a root treb- which was used extensively in Italic place names, but two of the possible sources, Trebula Suffenas and Trebula Mutuesca, were in the Sabine country [β¦].β
- Ancillotti, Augusto; Cerri, Romolo (2015), βtreblaneirβ, in Vocabolario dell'umbro delle tavole di Gubbio [Vocabulary of Umbrian and of the Iguvine Tables] (in Italian), page 53: βSecondo ogni probabilitΓ la porta si chiamava "treb(e)lana" perchΓ© si apriva sulla via per Treb(e)la, nome di un possibile abitato, da alcuni identificato con l'attuale zona di Troppola, pochissimi chilometri a nord di Gubbio, presso le sorgenti del Sentino. [Most likely the door was named "treb(e)lana" because it opened on the road for Treb(e)la, name of a possible town, by some identified as Troppola, a few kilometers north of Gubbio, near the springs of the Sentino.]β
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