Change viewing parameters
Select another database

Indo-European etymology :

Search within this database
Proto-IE: *k'yāupe- (-ph-)
Meaning: to rot
Old Indian: śopha- m. 'intumescence, tumour'
Old Greek: sǟ́pomai̯, pf. sésǟpa, aor. sapē̂nai̯ `verfaulen, faul werden', sǟ́pō, aor. sǟ̂psai̯, va. sǟptó- `faulen machen', sǟ̂psi-s `Fäulnis, Gährung', sǟ́p-s, gen. sǟpós f.`fauliges Geschwür'; sǟ́pǟ `Fäulnis', *sǟpetó-s: sēpetoû `rotting' Hsch.; sapró- `faul, verfault, ranzig'; sǟpedṓn, -dónos f. `Fäulnis'
Baltic: *čüp- vb. intr., *čū̂p-ē̂- vb. (1/2), *čū̂p- vb. inch.
Russ. meaning: гнить
References: WP I 500 (differently in Pok.)
Comments: About *k'y- see *k'yaur-.
piet-meaning,piet-ind,piet-greek,piet-balt,piet-rusmean,piet-refer,piet-comment,

Search within this database


Baltic etymology :

Search within this database
Proto-Baltic: *čüp- vb. intr., *čū̂p-ē̂- vb. (1/2), *čū̂p- vb. inch.
Meaning: rotten, dirty
Indo-European etymology: Indo-European etymology
Lithuanian: šiùpti (šium̃pa, šiùpō) `faulen (von Holz)', sušiùpęs `faul, verfault von Holz'
Lettish: sûpêt 'schmutzig werden; verderben (von Mehl); modern; räuchern (intr)', nùosũpêt, nùosūpt 'schmutzig werden, beschlagen'
baltet-meaning,baltet-prnum,baltet-lith,baltet-lett,

Search within this database

Select another database
Change viewing parameters
Total pages generatedPages generated by this script
5429641402285
Help
StarLing database serverPowered byCGI scripts
Copyright 1998-2003 by S. StarostinCopyright 1998-2003 by G. Bronnikov
Copyright 2005-2014 by Phil Krylov