An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language/Annotated/Ring

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Ring, masculine, ‘ring, circle, link,’ from Middle High German rinc (genitive ringes), Old High German ring, earlier hring, masculine. ‘ring, hoop, circular object’; compare Old Saxon hring, Dutch ring, Anglo-Saxon hring, English ring, Old Icelandic hringr, masculine. The common Teutonic word, which implies a casually non-existent Gothic *hriggs, denoted a circle, and everything of a circular form. Pre-Teutonic krengho- appears also in the corresponding Old Slovenian krągŭ, masculine, ‘circle,’ krąglŭ, ‘round.’ From the Teutonic word, which also signifies ‘assembly’ (grouped in a circle), are derived the Romance cognates, Italian aringo, ‘rostrum,’ French harangue, ‘public speech,’ and French rang.