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Indo-European etymology :

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\data\ie\piet
Proto-IE: *sēiw-, *sjēw-
Nostratic etymology: Nostratic etymology
Meaning: to sew
Hittite: suel-, suil- n. 'Faden'; su(m)manza(n)- c. 'Strick' (Friedrich 196, 197)
Old Indian: sī́vyati, ptc. syūtá- `to sew'; syū́man- n. `band, thong, bridle', sevana- n. `act of sewing, suture', sū́tra- n. `thread, yarn, string', sūci-, sūcī́ f. `needle'
Old Greek: kassǘō, att. kattǘō `flicken, schustern', kattǘs f. `Stück Leder'
Slavic: *šī́tī, *šьjǭ; *šьvъ; *šī́dlo
Baltic: *sǖ̂- (*süw-a-) vb. tr. (1), *sǖ̂-l-a- c., *sǖ̃-l-ā̂, -iā̃ f. (1), *sǖ-men-ā̂ f.
Germanic: *siw-ja- vb., *siu-d-á- m., *sau-m-a- m., *siw-il-ō f.
Latin: suō, -ere, suī, sūtum `nähen, zusammennähen', sūtor, -ōris m. `Schuster', sūbula f. `Pfrieme, Ahle'
Russ. meaning: шить
References: WP II 514 f
piet-prnum,piet-meaning,piet-hitt,piet-ind,piet-greek,piet-slav,piet-balt,piet-germ,piet-lat,piet-rusmean,piet-refer,

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