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Indo-European etymology :

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\data\ie\piet
Proto-IE: *(a)wēy-, *wyē-
Meaning: to fade, to get tired, exhausted
Old Indian: vāyati `to become languid, weary, exhausted', abhi-vāta- `ill, sick'; ā-vi-, ā-vī- f. `pain, suffering', pl. `pangs of childbirth'; vāta-, vāna- `dried up'
Old Greek: áethlo-s, -n, ark. [a]wethla, att. ā̂thlo-s, -n m., n.`Mühsal, Wettkampf, Kampfpreis'; ? <? watalǟ́> gateilaí (gatálai cod.) = oulaí Hsch.
Baltic: *wī̂- (1) vb., *wī̂-t-/*wī̃-t- (1) vb. intr., *wī̂-t-in-ā̂- (1), *wī̂-t-ē̂- (1), *weî-t-ē̂- (1) || *wā̂- vb., *wā̂-j-u- (2) adj., *wā̂-t-i- (2) c. (#667)
Germanic: *wī́-s-a- vb., *wí-s-n-ō- vb., *wí-s-n-an- m., *wái-s=, *wi-s-al-a-, *wí-s-al-ō- vb. || *wai-l-[a]- adj. #917
Latin: viēscō, -ere `verwelken, verschrumpfen', viētus `welk, eingeschrumpft'
Celtic: OIr feugud `marcor', Cymr gwyw `verwelkt'; OIr hōfebat `marcescunt'
Russ. meaning: уставать, истощаться, вянуть
References: WP I 213 f, 223 f, 227 f + REFERNUM 146
Comments: Very probably = *(a)wēy- 'get tired, exhausted' #1378
piet-meaning,piet-ind,piet-greek,piet-balt,piet-germ,piet-lat,piet-celt,piet-rusmean,piet-refer,piet-comment,

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