Minkä takia pellava on pellava

Why is flax called pellava? (englanti)3/2002 (106)Why is flax called pellava? In the Eastern and Northern Finnic languages, the term used to denote the flax plant has the stem pellava-: Fin. dial. pellava, pella|vas, -ves, pellova, pellovain(en), pellovas, pellain(en), pellavaittiin, pelva(a)s; Izh....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Oja, Vilja
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Finnish
Published: Kotikielen Seura 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.fi/virittaja/article/view/40194
Description
Summary:Why is flax called pellava? (englanti)3/2002 (106)Why is flax called pellava? In the Eastern and Northern Finnic languages, the term used to denote the flax plant has the stem pellava-: Fin. dial. pellava, pella|vas, -ves, pellova, pellovain(en), pellovas, pellain(en), pellavaittiin, pelva(a)s; Izh. and Vote pellavaz, pellovaz; Kar pellava(sh), pelva|sh, -s, -z; Veps pu|vaz, pu|vaz (p?az) gen. -han, p|vz gen. -hn. It has been considered a genuine Finnic word in origin, and this has led to the conclusion that the first inhabitants of the eastern and northern Finnic areas must have known a fibrous plant before any contact with either Baltic or Germanic tribes. The Sami words of the same stem (Kolta Sami arch. pielvas, Kildin arch. piillvas, piilvas, piilves, Inari Sami arch. piellivas, Norwegian Sami biellems ~ bllems) are considered Finnic loans.According to historians, woven cloth gradually began replacing the deerskin worn by the then inhabitants of the present-day Finnic area around the 3rd millennium B.C. Most likely, the hunting and fishing tribes who had lived in this area since the 7th millennium B.C. spoke a Proto-European dialect. What was their term for such a vital material as the leather or fur of an animal as well as objects (clothing, footwear, tents etc.) made of leather or fur? It seems possible that the terms had their origin in the Proto- Indo-European root *pel- to cover, as in Latin pellis ( Danish, Swedish pels) etc. The last mentioned have also been associated with certain Slavic terms with a pel-stem that are used for cloth or objects made of cloth (e.g. Russian ?????? cover, arch. (piece of) cloth; shroud, ???????, dial. ?????? babys nappy ~ diaper).Thus, the Finnic pellava word family could perhaps be based on an Indo- European substratum word of the same root. The concrete word shapes can be explained in various ways: 1) a loanword + derivative suffixes *pellV + -va + -s (or -inen); 2) a borrowed compound *pellV + *eu- (> IE *wes-), the second component of which occurs in many ...