Change viewing parameters
Select another database

Germanic etymology :

Search within this database
Proto-Germanic: *ɵrēan- vb.; *ɵrēdú-z
Meaning: thread; twist
IE etymology: IE etymology
Old Norse: ɵrāδ-r m. `Faden; Leine'
Norwegian: trɔd
Swedish: trɔd
Danish: trɔd
Old English: ɵrāwan `drehen, drechseln; (intr.) sich umkehren'; ɵrǟd `Draht, Faden'
English: throw; thread
Old Frisian: thrēd
Old Saxon: thrāian; thrād
Middle Dutch: draeyen; draet
Dutch: draaien; draad m.
Middle Low German: dreyen
Old High German: drāen `runden, drechseln, erhaben ausarbeiten' (8.Jh.); drāt `Faden, Schnur' (11.Jh.)
Middle High German: drǟjen, drǟgen, drǟhen, drǟn wk. intr. `sich drehend bewegen, wirbeln', tr. 'drehen, drechseln'; drāt st. m. 'draht'
German: drehen, Draht m.
germet-meaning,germet-prnum,germet-onord,germet-norw,germet-swed,germet-dan,germet-oengl,germet-engl,germet-ofris,germet-osax,germet-mdutch,germet-dutch,germet-mlg,germet-ohg,germet-mhg,germet-hg,

Search within this database


Indo-European etymology :

Search within this database
Proto-IE: *tere-, *trē-, *ter(e)-d-
Meaning: to turn, to bore
Old Indian: trṇatti, pf. tatárda `to cleave, split', tardati `to injure, kill'; tárdman- n. `hole, cleft', tr̥dilá- `porous', tradá- m. `one who cleaves or opens'
Old Greek: tetrái̯nō, títrēmi, titráō, titrái̯nō, pf. med. tétrēmai̯, ft. trḗsō, trētó- `durchbohren, durchlöchern', téressen = étrōsen, etórnōse;teréō `to bore through, pierce' Eust.; téretro-n n. `Bohrer', a-téramno- `hart, unerbittlich'; ; trē̂ma n. `Loch, Öffnung, Nadelöhr, Punkt auf dem Würfel', trē̂si-s f. `das Durchbohren, Öffnung, Loch'; küklo-terḗs `made round by turning'; tóro-s m. `borer, drill, used in trying for water, etc.' Phillyl., IG; tórno-s m. `Dreheisen, Drehbank, Eisen zur Vorzeichnung eines Kreises, Zirkellinie'; Kreisbewegung'; tórmo-s m. `Zapfenloch, Radnabe, -büchse, Zapfen'; aor. étore `durchbohren'; torē̂sai̯ `stechen, ziselieren, formen', anti-torē̂sai̯ `durchboren, -dringen, eindringen in'
Baltic: *tren̂d-ē̂- (*tren̂d-)
Germanic: *ɵrē-a- vb.; *ɵrē-d-ú- c.
Latin: terebra f. `Bohrer'
Celtic: *taradro- > OIr tarathar `Bohrer'; Cymr taradr `Bohrer'
Russ. meaning: вертеть, сверлить
References: WP I 728
piet-meaning,piet-ind,piet-greek,piet-balt,piet-germ,piet-lat,piet-celt,piet-rusmean,piet-refer,

Search within this database


Baltic etymology :

Search within this database
Proto-Baltic: *tren̂d-ē̂- (*tren̂d-)
Indo-European etymology: Indo-European etymology
Lithuanian: trendḗti (trénda) 'faulen, von Motten oder Würmern zerfressen werden'
baltet-prnum,baltet-lith,

Search within this database


Pokorny's dictionary :

Search within this database
Number: 2003
Root: terd-, tred-
English meaning: to drill
German meaning: `durchbohren'
General comments: (s. auch ter- `malmendes Insekt'), Erweiterung von *ter- `reiben, durchbohren'
Material: Ai. tr̥ṇátti, Kaus. tardayati (tardati Gramm.), Perf. tatárda `durchbohren, spalten', tardman- n. `Loch, Öffnung', tardá- m. `ein Insekt', tr̥dilá- `löcherig, durchbohrt', tradá- `der (durch Bohren) eröffnet'; lit. tréndu, -ė́ti `von Motten, Würmern zerfressen werden', trandė̃ u. trandìs `Made, Holzwurm'; ablaut. lett. trûdi `Moder', trûdêt `verwittern, faulen'; lit. trìdė `Durchfall'; aksl. trǫdъ `Zunder' und `Art Krankheit, δυσεντερία' (vgl. oben S. 1073 lit. tríedžiu `habe Durchfall': cymr. trwyddo `bohren'), čech. trud `Zitterich am Gesicht'.
References: WP. I 736, Trautmann 328, Vasmer 3, 144, Kuiper Idg. Nasalpräs. 96 f., 183 f., Mayrhofer 1, 521 f.
Pages: 1076
PIE database: PIE database
pokorny-root,pokorny-meaning,pokorny-ger_mean,pokorny-comments,pokorny-material,pokorny-ref,pokorny-pages,pokorny-piet,

Search within this database

Select another database
Change viewing parameters
Total pages generatedPages generated by this script
11483481687247
Help
StarLing database serverPowered byCGI scripts
Copyright 1998-2003 by S. StarostinCopyright 1998-2003 by G. Bronnikov
Copyright 2005-2014 by Phil Krylov