Page:An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language.djvu/61

Boo with πομπή, ‘pomp, parade,’ pompe; its  sense is ‘cotton,’ then ‘padding,’ and finally ‘inflated language.’ Its ultimate source is  bombyx;  the preceding word.   , ‘boat,’  only (not found in Luther), borrowed from  boot;  the   boot,  bât,  boat,  beitr. This word, which is still unknown to the dialects, is at all events native to England, whence it made its way during the  period into  (bátr), and in  times to the Continent ( boot). The origin of bât,  beitr, has not been discovered; like many other nautical terms, this word too is first recorded in. Moreover, the assumption that the word was borrowed in  times must be discarded.   ,, ‘board,’ borrowed, like many other nautical expressions (see the preceding word), from Bord, as a naval term, is found very early in , where it is explained by tabula; in  the word would end in t, as  and  bort ( bortes), ‘ship's side,’ testify; besides  or  is the more frequent term in  for what is called bord in. board combines two quite different words; the one, bord, signifies  ‘board, plank’ ( fôtubaúrd, ‘foot- board,’ to which  dambord, ‘draughtboard,’ is allied), and is  cognate with  ; the other means only ‘edge.’ See  and.   , (the  of Soest), ‘fertile plain, plain bordering on a river’; from  börde,  gebörde, ‘department,’  ‘propriety,’ corresponding in form to  giburida.   ,, ‘brothel,’ only, from  bordel (whence also  bordel and brothel), a   from  , ‘board,’ and meaning  ‘a hut.’  ,, ‘to border (a dress),’ from border, which comes from.  ', ',, ‘borage,’ from the  bourrache (  borragine), whence also the  term.  ,, ‘to borrow, lend,’ from borgen,  borgên,  ‘to watch over, spare a person,’ then ‘to remit him his debt, to borrow’; also ‘to be surety for something’; similarly  borgian, ‘to protect’ and ‘to borrow,’  to borrow. Since the meaning ‘to watch over’ underlies both, ‘to borrow,’ and , ‘to be responsible,’ the word may be compared with  brěgą, ‘I take care of.’ The root may have been  borg-, pre- bhergh-; perhaps bergen is to be connected with the same root.  ,, ‘bark,’ a loan-word, which is not found in. The proper is. barke, and  bark,  bǫrkr, ‘bark’;  *barkus is not recorded. Its connection with (in the sense of ‘concealing’) may be possible as far as its form is concerned; but on account of  bhûrja,  ‘birch,’  ‘birch-bark,’ its relation to  is more probable.   ,, ‘fountain,’ form for. <section end="Born" /> <section begin="Börse" /> ,, from burse, ‘purse, small bag,’ also ‘a number of persons living together,’  burissa, ‘pocket.’   beurs; of  origin ( bourse,  borsa); the  class is derived finally from  βύρσα, ‘hide.’ This word supplanted an  term which shows a similar development of meaning —  pungr, ‘leather bottle, scrotum, purse,’  puggs,  scazpfung, ‘purse.’ <section end="Börse" /> <section begin="Borst" /> ,, ‘burst, chink,’ from. <section end="Borst" /> <section begin="Borste" /> ,, ‘bristle,’ from the  borste, , bürst, borst, , ,  burst, , ;   byrst, and with a suffix l, brystl,  bristle;  *baúrstus or *baúrsts, , is not recorded. Bors- is the form of the root;  further  bur, from  *burr (for *burzu-, properly ‘bristly’). Pre- bhers- shows itself in bhṛš-ṭi-, ‘point, prong, corner’; also in  fastigium, ‘extreme edge’?. . <section end="Borste" /> <section begin="Bort" /> ,, ‘board,’ from the  bort;   fôtubaúrd, ‘footstool,’  and  bord,  bord, ‘board, shield, table,’  board (see ). The word bord meant the same as, to which it is related by gradation; the apparent metathesis of re to or is , as in  in relation to ; ,  may be represented in  as brádhas, bṛdhas. See. <section end="Bort" /> <section begin="Borte" /> ,, ‘ribbon or trimming of gold thread and silk,’ the earlier meaning is simply ‘border’; borte, ‘border, frame, ribbon, lace’ ( further the cognate, ),  borto, ‘seam, trimming’ (whence  bordo, ‘border, frame,’  bord).

<section end="Borte" />