- edlà
- ȇdlь; edlà
Grammatical information: f. i; f. ā
Accent paradigm: c
Proto-Slavic meaning: `spruce, fir'
Page in Trubačev: VI 14-15Russian:el' `spruce, fir' [f i], éli [Gens] \{1\}Czech:jedle `fir' [f jā]Old Czech:jedl `spruce, fir' [f i]Slovak:jedl'a `fir' [f jā]Polish:jodɫa `fir' [f ā] \{2\}Old Polish:jedl `spruce, fir' [f i];jedla [f ā]Serbo-Croatian:jéla `fir' [f ā];jȅla `fir' [f ā];Čak. jȅla (Vrgada) `tree-trunk' [f ā]Slovene:ję̑l `spruce, fir' [f i], jelȋ [Gens];ję̑la `spruce, fir' [f ā]Bulgarian:jelá `fir' [f ā]Proto-Balto-Slavic reconstruction: edli-Lithuanian:ẽglė `spruce, fir' [f ē] 2Latvian:egle `spruce, fir' [f ē]Old Prussian:addle (EV) `spruce, fir' [f]Indo-European reconstruction: h₁edʰ-l-iIE meaning: spruce, firPage in Pokorny: 289-290Comments: Connecting the name of the `spruce' or `fir-tree' with Lith. ãdata `needle' and adýti `to darn', as advocated by Fraenkel ( Fraenkel I: 117-118) and Pokorny, is semantically attractive but does not make much sense in relation to Lat. ebulum (cf. Andersen 1996: 119).Other cognates:Lat. ebulum `dwarf-elder, danewort (sambucus ebulus)' [n], ebulus `dwarf-elder, danewort (sambucus ebulus)' [f];Gaul. odocos `dwarf-elder, danewort (sambucus ebulus)';OHG attuh, attah `dwarf-elder, danewort (sambucus ebulus)'Notes:\{1\} Alongside ëlka. A different reflex of the sequence *dl is attested in the dialect form ëgla. \{2\} In dialects we find such forms as jegla and jagla.
Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar. 2014.