hwhatting wrote: ↑Mon Mar 21, 2022 2:12 pm
Talskubilos wrote: ↑Sun Mar 20, 2022 8:25 am
I've read De Vaan's book on Leiden-Brill and once again he disaapointed (I think I already mentioned his is a rather mediocre work). To begin with, he links
sīdus with the verbs
consīderō 'to examine, to contemplate',
desīderō 'to desire', which is a different etymology!
It's not he who links them, he's quoting other scholars who do; it's only right for an etymological dictionary to discuss the previously proposed etymologies. Rather than being dismissive, it would be better if you said why you think that the words are not related and what you think the correct etymology is and on what basis.
Fair. On one hand, the etymology proposed by Rix would explain Latin
consīderō, desīderō as being cognate to Greek
ithús ~ euthús 'straight, just' and Gujarati
sīdhũ 'straight(forward), upright', Sanskrit
siddha 'acomplished', etc. from an IE root
*seHdh- 'to acomplish a goal'. But IMHO there's no way Latin
sīdus would semantically fit here, so I consider it to be a homonymous word with no obvious IE etymology (
*sweid- 'to shine' would explain
sūdus 'dry; sunny'), atlhough probably related to Greek
sidēros.
