Change viewing parameters
Switch to Russian version
Select another database

Baltic etymology :

Search within this database
\data\ie\baltet
Proto-Baltic: *treñk- vb. tr., *trañk-ī̂- vb., *trañk-u- adj., *trañk-ia- c., *trank-s-n-ia- c.
Meaning: beat, smash
Indo-European etymology: Indo-European etymology
Lithuanian: treñkti (treñkia, -kē) `dröhnend stossen, werfen, schleudern, schmettern, schütteln, durch Stossen erschüttern', trankī́ti 'mehrfach dröhnend stossen, dröhnen, schütteln, klopfen, pochen', trankù- 'holperig, hart, fest, rüttelnd, schüttelnd, laut', trìnkti 'erdröhnen', trinkḗti; trañki-s 'Stoss, Puff, Knall, Gekrach, Tumult, Lärm', trañksma-s `dass.', trankù- `holperig', trinkḗti (trìnka) `fortgesetzt dröhnen, donnern, poltern'
Lettish: trìekt (trìecu) `stossen, schlagen; erschüttern; zerstossen, zerquetschen, zerschmettern; (weg)jagen, scheuchen; beeilen, beschleunigen; säend (aufs Geratewohl) werfen', trùoksnis, truoksns (gen. -s), truokšn̨is `Lärm, Gepolter'; trĩcêt 'zittern, beben'
Old Prussian: pertrincktan `verstockt', trencke 'stoss an'
baltet-meaning,baltet-prnum,baltet-lith,baltet-lett,baltet-oprus,

List with all references
Search within this database
Select another database

Total pages generatedPages generated by this script
220042114734884
Help
StarLing database serverPowered byCGI scripts
Copyright 1998-2003 by S. StarostinCopyright 1998-2003 by G. Bronnikov
Copyright 2005-2014 by Phil Krylov