I recently found out the origin of the verb 'bring' as being derived from bher- (carry) and enk- (to go to) and how they fused together and came into Germanic as *bhrengk- then coming down into English as 'bring'. I was wondering if anyone knew if there was a way I could find out what other reflexes (if any) that *enk- had been preserved in any sort of form?
Given it's a verb of motion I imagine it would have been able to be freely used metaphorically and potentially have been applied to many roots which I think could easily exist in modern languages. Is there a resource you know that might supply this information?
Is this the only reflex of it that we're all aware of? Can anyone point to any other words that contain this? I've got quite a steady knowledge of historical linguistics but I've never gone back to any period further than Germanic or Latin so here's to diving back a bit deeper!
Things seem so obvious when you see a connection between them. I would not have made the association between nóg (Icelandic) and enough (English) even though they both mean 'enough'. Once you see Old Norse (gnogr) then it sort of fits in as an intermediate step.
But, one thing I would like to ask about is the 'nek' part. Because the original was about 'enk' and your answer included information on 'nek', am I to take from this that we're talking about a metathical process of the same 'enk-' root?
– Alxmrphi Feb 12 '12 at 15:40