Change viewing parameters
Select another database

Baltic etymology :

Search within this database
Proto-Baltic: *neiǯ-ē̂- vb. (Lith CIRC, Lett AC, 1), neiǯ-a- c., *naiǯ-ā̂ f., -a- c. (Lett CIRC/AC, 1)
Meaning: itch
Indo-European etymology: Indo-European etymology
Lithuanian: niežḗti, 3 prs. niežt(i) `jucken'; niẽžas `Krätzmilbe', pl. niežaĩ `Krätze, Räude'
Lettish: niẽzêt (3 sg. prs. niẽz/niezt, prt. niẽzẽja) intr. `jucken', naĩza, nàiza2, naîza2, nàizs2, naĩzis `Krätze', naîze2 'Gipken'
baltet-meaning,baltet-prnum,baltet-lith,baltet-lett,

Search within this database


Indo-European etymology :

Search within this database
Proto-IE: *(a)neig'-
Meaning: illness, desease, to be ill; sick
Avestan: naēza- Name einer Krankheit; Osset nēz, nīz 'Krankheit'
Armenian: ? anic 'Laus' [rather < Cauc.]
Old Greek: anigró- `lästig'
Baltic: *neiǯ-(ē̂-) vb. (Lith CIRC, Lett AC, 2?), neiǯ-a- c. (Lith CIRC), *naiǯ-ā̂ f., -a- c. (Lett AC, 1)
Russ. meaning: болезнь, болеть; больной, тяжкий
References: WP II 332
piet-meaning,piet-avest,piet-arm,piet-greek,piet-balt,piet-rusmean,piet-refer,

Search within this database

Select another database
Change viewing parameters
Total pages generatedPages generated by this script
19721871828013
Help
StarLing database serverPowered byCGI scripts
Copyright 1998-2003 by S. StarostinCopyright 1998-2003 by G. Bronnikov
Copyright 2005-2014 by Phil Krylov