An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language, N (1891)
by Friedrich Kluge, translated by John Francis Davis
nein
Friedrich Kluge2512431An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language, N — nein1891John Francis Davis

nein, adv., ‘no,’ from the equiv. MidHG. and OHG. nein (negative adv.); so too OSax. nên (in the Heliand), ‘no’; derived from the Goth. adv. of negation ni, OHG. ni, MidHG. en-ne (which also appears in the n of nicht, nie, and nirgend), and the neut. of the indefinite article OHG., MidHG., and ModHG. ein, equiv. to Goth. ains; nein is therefore ‘not one’ (comp. nichts, meaning ‘not something’). The approximate source of E. no is the equiv. AS. (OIc. nei), in Goth. , ‘no.’ The Goth. negative ni, etymologically cognate with un- and ohne, belongs to the same class as Gr. νη (e.g. νη-κερδής, ‘unprofitable’), Lat. (in nĕfas) and nē̆, ‘not, lest, in order that not,’ Sans. na, OSlov. ne, ‘not,’ Lith. ne, ‘not.’