It would. So would *ttsˀwǝ̄nHē:Talskubilos wrote: ↑Mon Feb 01, 2021 7:59 amNot impossible, but they would require consonant metathesis.Nortaneous wrote: ↑Sun Jan 31, 2021 1:59 pmalso Latin mālum and Turkic almaTalskubilos wrote: ↑Sun Jan 31, 2021 9:02 am *ablu- 'apple' looks like a Wandwerwort with correspondences elsewhere: Hittite šam(a)lu-, Uralic *omɜrɜ ~ *omena 'apple', probably also Nakh-Dagestanian *mhălV- ~ *mhănV- 'warm', with some kind of prefix (cfr. Basque udare, udari, madari 'pear'.
The alternate form of the "Proto-North Caucasian" root is almost identical to its "Proto-Sino-Caucasian" source, *c̣wǝ̄́nHē.STARLING wrote: Proto-North Caucasian: *Hnǝ̄c̣_wē (/*c̣_wǝ̄nHē)
Sino-Caucasian etymology: Sino-Caucasian etymology
Meaning: reed, cane
Proto-Avaro-Andian: *c̣:ʷimʔa (/-nʔa)
Meaning: reed, cane
> Avar: muc̣:í / nuc̣:í
> Andian language: c̣:uma
> Akhvakh: c̣:ʷani
> Chamalal: ṣimi
> Tindi: c:ū̃
> Karata: c̣:un-di (pl.)
> Godoberi: c:uma
Comments: Av. paradigm B (muc̣:í-dul, muc̣:á-bi). Cf. also And. dial. (Khaidakov) c̣:ʷa, Cham. Gig. c̣:ima. Old Tind. > Inkh. c̣ũj 'reed'; Av. > Tsez. nuc̣i, Gin. nic̣u id.
Proto-Lezghian: *nac̣ʷa
North Caucasian etymology: North Caucasian etymology
Meaning: reed, cane
Lezghian: nac̣
Tabasaran: nac̣ (Khiv.)
Agul: nec̣
Rutul: nac̣
Tsakhur: nac̣
Comment: Cf. also Lezg. Khl. nac̣ʷ (preserving the original labialisation which was lost everywhere else); Tsakh. Gelm. nac̣a. The latter form unambiguously points to the PL paradigm *nac̣ʷa, *nac̣ʷä- (cf. also Rut. nac̣a-; Tsakh. Mik. nac̣, nac̣ɨ- is secondary). In Ag. there occurred a regular fronting *a > e before a hissing affricate in a closed syllable. 4th class in Rut., Tsakh.
Turkic alma would be metathesis, especially since Blažek lists Turkic forms with -ml-.
Blažek thinks there's no connection between the two words, but he only has examples for his color term in Latvian and Greek, and his rejected compound "slime apple" is entirely plausible as a name for a medlar, or maybe even a quince, a traditional source of pectin. It could also be a loan that was later characterized (cf. "satsuma mandarin" / "satsuma orange" and other examples I got from Wikipedia's list of fruits, such as "midgen berry", "bailan melon", and "muscadine grape" - presumably also "kola nut"), but the one image search result I can find that's clearly the right type of apple has some examples that look like quinces to me.