An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language/Annotated/schaben

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search

schaben, verb, ‘to shave, scrape, scratch,’ from Middle High German schaben, Old High German scaban, ‘to scratch, erase, scrape,’ corresponding to Gothic skaban, ‘to shear’; Old Icelandic skafa, ‘to scratch, shave,’ Anglo-Saxon sčęafan, English to shave, Dutch schaven, ‘to shave, smooth.’ Teutonic root skab, from the pre-Teutonic root skā̆p; compare Greek σκάπ-τω, ‘to dig,’ σκαπάνη, ‘spade,’ Lithuanian skópti, ‘to hollow out,’ skáptas, ‘woodcarver's knife’; allied also probably to Latin scabo, ‘to scratch, shave,’ Old Slovenian skoblĭ, ‘spokeshave,’ Lithuanian skabùs, ‘sharp’ (Aryan root skā̆b). See the preceding words as well as Schuppe and Schaft.