Page:An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language.djvu/390

Tre also, , and. In the non- languages no Aryan root dre-t is found, though δρόμος, ‘course,’  root dram, ‘to run’ ( tręm, ‘step’), and the root of the cognates of  seem to be  connected with it. ,, ‘true, faithful,’ from late triuwe, for which classical  has getriuwe (hence  ),  gitriuwi, ‘true, faithful, trusty, loyal.’ Properly a derivative of  triuwa,  triuwe , ; ,  ‘possessing loyalty.’ in  triuwi,  trouw,  treówe, trŷwe ( true, truth, to trow, and to trust),  triggws, ‘true.’  treuwo- (treuwi-?), for pre- dréwo-, is related to the assumed (see ) Aryan root drū̆, ‘to have confidence,’ with which  druwis, ‘belief,’ is connected. triuwa,, ‘fidelity,’ corresponds to treuwa,  treów, ‘fidelity,’  triggwa, ‘agreement, compact’; with the last signification,  tregua,  trève, ‘armistice,’ borrowed from , are connected.   (in and  dialects ),, ‘funnel,’ from the   trihter, with older variants tręhter, drahter,  trahtâri, ; corresponding to  trechter, OAS. tructer ( tratt?). Based on tractârius, ‘funnel,’ corrupted from the   trâjectôrium ( trajicere, traicere), ‘to pour from one vessel into another.’ For the contraction , , from  Ultrajectum, Mosae-Trajectum. The word was borrowed in coincident with the introduction of  wine-culture (, , and ). As in the case of, the Romance languages retain few traces of the word;   trachuoir, Walloon and Vosges trętœ (the more widely diffused  word for ‘funnel’ is  infundibulum,  to  fondèfle, yet  taftâr, ‘funnel,’ is also based on  *tractârius for trajectorium).   ,, ‘sprout; instinct, impulse,’ only; allied to. .  ,, ‘to drop, drip, trickle,’ from triefen,  triofan,  , ‘to drop’; corresponding to  driopan,  druipen,  dreópan, ‘to drop.’ To this are allied the cognates of , , and. With the root drū̆p (from pre- dhrū̆b),  drucht  (base druptu-), ‘dew, dewdrop,’ is also probably connected. , see.  ,, ‘right of pasturage, common,’ from trift, , ‘pasture,’  ‘place to which something is driven’; not recorded in   (as in the case of ) is a relic of the speech of  nomad life. trift also signifies (as a derivative of the root of ) ‘herd, drove, floating (of wood), actions, mode of life’;  drift and drove.  , ‘drifting; convincing, sound, valid,’ from late  (rare) triftec (g), ‘striking, pertinent, suitable’; a derivative of. ,, ‘to trill, warble,’ only, from the   trillare. ,, ‘to drink,’ from the  trinken,  trinchan; a common   ;   drigkan,  drincan,  to drink,  drinken,  drinkan. From are derived the Romance cognates,  trincare,  trinquer, ‘to touch glasses.’ The  verbal root drink (Aryan dhreng) is not found in non-; on the other hand, the Aryan root pô, ‘to drink’ (  pâ,  πω-,  pô-tus, &c.), is wanting in  — ,. ,, ‘to trip, mince,’ only; corresponding to  dribbelen. A recent intensive form from or.  ,, ‘gonorrhea,’ a and  word for which older  ,  (allied to ), occurs. dripper, allied to drip.   ,, ‘step, tread,’ from trit,. Allied to.  , ‘dry, barren,’ from the   trocken, trucken (truchen),  trochan (trucchan);   drucno, drocno, ‘dry.’ Corresponding to the   dreuge,  droog (, to which  droogte, ‘dryness,’ is allied),  drŷge,  dry (allied to drought), which are derived from cognate roots. With the root drū̆k, drū̆g, draug, ‘to be dry,’ is also connected  draugr, ‘dry wood.’ A pre- root dkrū̆ḳ (dhrū̆g) has not yet been found in the other Aryan languages.  ,, ‘tassel, bob,’ of  trâde,  tráda,  (trâdo, ), ‘fringe’;  trôdel ( for trâdel) signifies ‘fibre in wood,’ Since the other