2016-12-31

Earth

From Middle English erthe, from Old English eorþe ‎(earth, ground, soil, dry land), from Proto-Germanic *erþō ‎(earth, ground, soil) (compare West Frisian ierdeLow German EerdDutch aardeDutch Low Saxon eerdeGerman ErdeDanish jord), related to *erwōn ‎(earth) (compare Old High German ero, perhaps Old Norse jǫrfi ‎(c)), from Proto-Indo-European *h₁er- (compare Ancient Greek *ἔρα ‎(*éra) in ἔραζε ‎(érazeon the ground), perhaps Tocharian B yare ‎(gravel).
Probably unrelated though of unknown etymology is Old Armenian երկիր ‎(erkirearth)). Likewise, the phonologically similar Proto-Semitic *ʾarṣ́- (whence Arabic أَرْض ‎(ʾarḍ)Hebrew אֶרֶץ ‎(ʾereṣ)) is probably not related.

אֶרֶץ ‎(ʾereṣ))


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