
Polskie pantałyk i jego wschodniosłowiańskie, słowackie i morawskie odpowiedniki – uwagi o pochodzeniu
Author(s) -
Marek Stachowski
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
lingvaria
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2392-1226
pISSN - 1896-2122
DOI - 10.12797/lv.12.2017.24.11
Subject(s) - etymology , slovak , slavic languages , suffix , german , loanword , word (group theory) , history , linguistics , classics , philosophy , czech
Polish pantałyk and its Eastern Slavic, Slovak, and Moravian Counterparts. Remarks About the OriginThe Polish word pantałyk is only used in the expression zbić z pantałyku ‘put sb off his stride, confuse, upset, disconcert’ (lit. ‘strike sb off the pantałyk’). The original meaning and the etymology of the word have been unknown, and this is also valid for Moravian, Slovak and Eastern Slavonic. This author argues that it primarily was a riding term ‘crupper’, composed of a German loanword with a Slavonic suffix.