Change viewing parameters
Select another database

Indo-European etymology :

Search within this database
Proto-IE: *smāg-
Meaning: to beat, to throw
Baltic: *smā̃g- (-ja-) vb. tr., *smā̃g-ia- c., *smag-ī̂-, -ō̂- vb.
Germanic: *smakk-ja- vb., *smakk-ō- vb.
Russ. meaning: бить, бросать
References: WP II 685
piet-meaning,piet-balt,piet-germ,piet-rusmean,piet-refer,

Search within this database


Baltic etymology :

Search within this database
Proto-Baltic: *smā̃g- (-ja-) vb. tr., *smā̃g-ia- c., *smag-ī̂-, -ō̂- vb.
Meaning: beat
Indo-European etymology: Indo-European etymology
Old Lithuanian: smōgē `Peitschenhieb'
Lithuanian: smō̃gti (ostlit. smãgia, lit. smō̃gia; prt. smō̃gē) `peitschen, schlagen, (etwas schweren) werfen, schleudern, schmeissen', dial. smō̃gi-s `heftiger Wurf, Schlag, Schleudern, Peitschenhieb', smagī́ti, smagṓti `peitschen'
baltet-meaning,baltet-prnum,baltet-olith,baltet-lith,

Search within this database


Germanic etymology :

Search within this database
Proto-Germanic: *smakkjan-, *smakkōn- vb.
Meaning: throw down
IE etymology: IE etymology
Swedish: smäkka, dial. smakka `heftig niederwerfen'
germet-meaning,germet-prnum,germet-swed,

Search within this database

Select another database
Change viewing parameters
Total pages generatedPages generated by this script
11409261685562
Help
StarLing database serverPowered byCGI scripts
Copyright 1998-2003 by S. StarostinCopyright 1998-2003 by G. Bronnikov
Copyright 2005-2014 by Phil Krylov