ऋभु
Sanskrit
Alternative forms
Alternative scripts
- ᬋᬪᬸ (Balinese script)
- ঋভু (Assamese script)
- ঋভু (Bengali script)
- 𑰆𑰥𑰲 (Bhaiksuki script)
- 𑀋𑀪𑀼 (Brahmi script)
- 𑌋𑌭𑍁 (Grantha script)
- ઋભુ (Gujarati script)
- ਰਭੁ (Gurmukhi script)
- ꦉꦨꦸ (Javanese script)
- ឫភុ (Khmer script)
- ಋಭು (Kannada script)
- ຣິຠຸ (Lao script)
- ഋഭു (Malayalam script)
- 𑘆𑘥𑘳 (Modi script)
- ᠷᠢᠪᠾᠤ (Mongolian script)
- ᡵᡳᢨᡠ (Manchu script)
- ၒဘု (Burmese script)
- 𑦦𑧅𑧔 (Nandinagari script)
- 𑐆𑐨𑐸 (Newa script)
- ଋଭୁ (Odia script)
- ꢈꢩꢸ (Saurashtra script)
- 𑆉𑆨𑆶 (Sharada script)
- 𑖆𑖥𑖲 (Siddham script)
- ඍභු (Sinhalese script)
- ரிப⁴ு (Tamil script)
- ఋభు (Telugu script)
- ฤภุ (Thai script)
- རྀ་བྷུ (Tibetan script)
- 𑒇𑒦𑒳 (Tirhuta script)
Etymology
Presumedly from Proto-Indo-Aryan *Hr̥bʰúṣ, from Proto-Indo-Iranian *Hr̥bʰúš, but of uncertain origin:
- Perhaps from Proto-Indo-European *h₃órbʰos (“servant, worker; orphan”), the same source of Proto-Germanic *arbaidiz (“toil, labor, work”) and Proto-Slavic *orbota (“work”). (See अर्भ (arbha).)
- Perhaps a derivative of Proto-Indo-European *h₂elbʰós (“white”). Compare Proto-Germanic *albiz (“elf”) (whence English elf). This supposedly points to the original mythical sense in which elves or craftsmen gods were luminous heavenly workers,[1] thus given the name “white one”, later interpreted in Sanskrit as “skilled one”. The connection with the Germanic mytheme of elves is further said to be supported by cognate poetic formulas, such as “chariot made by craftsmen” as an allegory of the sun; cf. Old Norse Alfrǫðull (“sun”, literally “elf-wheel”).[2] The root *h₂elbʰ- (“white”) is otherwise absent from Indo-Iranian.
- Alternatively non-Indo-European, such as from a pre-Indo-Aryan substrate language; however, this is highly improbable due to the presence of a syllabic consonant ऋ in the word, a characteristic of Indo-European words.
Declension
| Masculine u-stem declension of ऋभु (ṛbhú) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Singular | Dual | Plural | |
| Nominative | ऋभुः ṛbhúḥ |
ऋभू ṛbhū́ |
ऋभवः ṛbhávaḥ |
| Vocative | ऋभो ṛ́bho |
ऋभू ṛ́bhū |
ऋभवः ṛ́bhavaḥ |
| Accusative | ऋभुम् ṛbhúm |
ऋभू ṛbhū́ |
ऋभून् ṛbhū́n |
| Instrumental | ऋभुणा / ऋभ्वा¹ ṛbhúṇā / ṛbhvā̀¹ |
ऋभुभ्याम् ṛbhúbhyām |
ऋभुभिः ṛbhúbhiḥ |
| Dative | ऋभवे / ऋभ्वे² ṛbháve / ṛbhvè² |
ऋभुभ्याम् ṛbhúbhyām |
ऋभुभ्यः ṛbhúbhyaḥ |
| Ablative | ऋभोः / ऋभ्वः² ṛbhóḥ / ṛbhvàḥ² |
ऋभुभ्याम् ṛbhúbhyām |
ऋभुभ्यः ṛbhúbhyaḥ |
| Genitive | ऋभोः / ऋभ्वः² ṛbhóḥ / ṛbhvàḥ² |
ऋभ्वोः ṛbhvóḥ |
ऋभूणाम् ṛbhūṇā́m |
| Locative | ऋभौ ṛbhaú |
ऋभ्वोः ṛbhvóḥ |
ऋभुषु ṛbhúṣu |
| Notes |
| ||
References
- Calin, Didier (2017), ““elf” (elves = heavenly smiths)”, in Dictionary of Indo-European Poetic and Religious Themes (Linguistique; 3), Les Cent Chemins, →ISBN, page 78: “PIE *álbʰo-/-u-, G. *l̥bʰéus”
- Calin, Didier (2017), “chariot of the elves/heavenly smiths”, in Dictionary of Indo-European Poetic and Religious Themes (Linguistique; 3), Les Cent Chemins, →ISBN, page 49
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.