An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language/Annotated/mangeln

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search

mangeln, verb, ‘to want, lack, be lacking,’ from Middle High German mangeln, Old High German mangolôn, ‘to dispense with, miss, be in want of'; Mangel, from Middle High German mangel, masculine, ‘want, defect.’ To this is allied Middle High German manc, ‘want, defect,’ also Old High German mangôn, męngen, ‘to be deficient’; Dutch mangelen, ‘to dispense with.’ A Teutonic root mang, mangw, does not occur elsewhere; it may be primitively allied to Latin mancus, ‘mutilated, powerless, deficient,’ from which early derivatives were formed in English, Anglo-Saxon gemancian, ‘to mutilate’; to this Dutch mank, ‘limping, deficient,’ and English to mangle are also akin.