An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language/Annotated/auch

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search

auch, adverb and conjunction, ‘also, likewise,’ from Middle High German ouch, Old High German ouh, ‘and, also, but.’ It corresponds to Old Saxon ôk, Dutch ook; OFries. âk, Anglo-Saxon eác, English eke, Old Icelandic auk, ‘besides,’ Danish og, ‘and, also, but,’ Swedish och, Icelandic ok; Gothic auk, ‘then, but’; an adverb common to Teutonic. Some refer this auk to the Teutonic root auk (Aryan aug), ‘to increase,’ whence Old High German ouhhôn, ‘to add,’ Old Saxon òkian, Anglo-Saxon ŷcan, Old Icelandic auka, Gothic aukan, ‘to increase,’ are derived (Latin augere, aug-ustus, Sanscrit ugrás, ‘powerful,’ ôjas, ‘strength,’ are allied to them); compare Anglo-Saxon tô-eácan, ‘moreover, also.’ Others trace Teutonic auk to a compound of two Aryan particles, au and ge (Greek αὖ, γε).