| This annotated version expands theabbreviations in the original entryin. | Random wordSpecial:RandomInCategory/Annotated entries in Kluge's Etymological Dictionary of the German Language |
in, preposition, ‘in, into, at,’ from the equivalent Middle High German and Old High Germanin, a common Teutonic preposition with the same form; compare Gothic, Anglo-Saxon, English, Dutch, and Old Saxonin, ‘in.’ Its primitive kinship with Latinin, Greekἐν,ἐνί, Lithuaniani, and Letticë is certain. To this are alliedindem,indeß, andindessen.