Change viewing parameters
Select another database

Indo-European etymology :

Search within this database
Proto-IE: *nēyt-, *nyēt-
Meaning: to be hostile, to attack
Tokharian: A ñātse, B ñyātse 'danger, plague, distress' (Adams 273 < *ni̯ēti̯o-)
Germanic: *nī́ɵ-a- n., m.; *nī́ɵ-ia- vb., *nī́ɵ-ō- vb., *nī́ɵ-an- m.
Celtic: *nīt- > OIr nīth `Kampf, Schlacht, Not'
Russ. meaning: намеревать зло, нападать
References: WP II 336
piet-meaning,piet-tokh,piet-germ,piet-celt,piet-rusmean,piet-refer,

Search within this database


Germanic etymology :

Search within this database
Proto-Germanic: *nī́ɵa-n, -z; *nī́ɵian-, *nī́ɵōn- vb., *nī́ɵēn
Meaning: envy, anger
IE etymology: IE etymology
Gothic: *nīɵ n. (a) `envy, spite', *anda-nīɵa m. (n) `contrary, hostile, opposed'
Old Norse: nīδ n. `Schmähung, Verhöhnung', nīδa wk. `schmähen'
Norwegian: nid; nida vb.
Old Swedish: nidh `Neid, Schande'
Swedish: dial. nida vb.
Old Danish: nid
Old English: nīɵ m. `Streben, Feinselichkeit'
Old Frisian: nīth n. `haat, nijd'
Old Saxon: nīth m. `haat, toorn, nijd, vijandschap, inspanning'
Middle Dutch: nijt m. `drift, haat, hartstocht, wrok, strijdlust, kwaadaardigheid, nijd, afgunst'
Dutch: nijd m.
Old High German: nīd (8.Jh.) m. `Kampfesgrimm, Groll, Hass, Neid, Bosheit'; { nīden }, nīdōn 'neidisch sein, hassen' (8.Jh.)
Middle High German: nīt (gen. nīdes) 'feindselige Stimmung, Kampfesgrimm, Groll, Eifer, Arg'; nīden st. (/wk.) 'neiden'
German: Neid m.; neiden
germet-meaning,germet-prnum,germet-got,germet-onord,germet-norw,germet-oswed,germet-swed,germet-odan,germet-oengl,germet-ofris,germet-osax,germet-mdutch,germet-dutch,germet-ohg,germet-mhg,germet-hg,

Search within this database

Select another database
Change viewing parameters
Total pages generatedPages generated by this script
19851071829945
Help
StarLing database serverPowered byCGI scripts
Copyright 1998-2003 by S. StarostinCopyright 1998-2003 by G. Bronnikov
Copyright 2005-2014 by Phil Krylov