TY - JOUR TI - Sur l’étymologie du latin virgō « vierge » AU - Garnier, Romain TI - Sur l’étymologie du latin virgō « vierge » AB - On the etymology of Latin virgō ‘virgin’. The following paper is intended to explain the etymology of Lat. uirgō ‘virgin’, which serves both as adjective and sub- stantive. There is a synchronic opposition in Latin between uirgō and mulier ‘woman’, the last of which clearly alludes to sexuality, in such a locution as mulierem reddere ‘to make someone a woman’. According to the Hittite formula natta=arkant- ‘not-covered, unmounted’, which is used for sheep and cows, this puzzling Latin word could be ac- counted for by a PIE privative compound *h1 í-h1  h-ō n ‘not-covered, unmounted’. This inherited vocable would eventually belong to the PIE root *h1 er h-‘to mount, cover’ which is likely to have been used by cattle-breeders. VL - 2014 IS - Volume 19, Issue 2 PY - 2014 SN - 1427-8219 C1 - 2084-3836 SP - 59 EP - 70 DO - 10.4467/20843836SE.14.003.1646 UR - https://ejournals.eu/czasopismo/studia-etymologica-cracoviensia/artykul/sur-letymologie-du-latin-virgo-vierge KW - etymology KW - Latin KW - Hittite KW - Proto-Indo-European