An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language/Annotated/Mahd

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Mahd, feminine, ‘mowing, swath,’ from Middle High German mât (genitive mâdes), neuter (also feminine), ‘mowing, what has been mown, hay, meadow,’ Old High German mâd, neuter; hence Old High German mâdâri, Middle High German mâdœre, mœder, Modern High German Mähder, ‘mower’; Anglo-Saxon mœ̂þ, neuter, ‘mowing, what has been mown, hay,’ English math in aftermath and lattermath. High German Mahd, and English math, Gothic *mêþ (genitive *mêþis), are properly verbal abstracts of the root , ‘to mow,’ just as the cognate Greek ἄμητος, ‘harvest,’ is derived from ἁμάω, ‘I mow’; compare also ἀμητός, ‘crop, the field when reaped.’ See Grummet, Matte, and Omet. —