Proto-IE: *wekʷ- (Gr w-)
Meaning: to say, to tell
Tokharian: A wak, B wek 'voice, noise' (PT *wek) (Adams 607); B weśeñña 'voice, sound' (610)
Old Indian: vakti, vívakti, ptc. uktá- `to speak, say, tell'; vácas- `speech, voice, word', vā́c- f. `speech, voice, word'
Avestan: vačah `Rede, Wort', vāx-s `Stimme, Rede, Wort'
Armenian: gočem `schreie, rufe, rufe zu mir, lade ein, nenne'
Old Greek: épos, el., kypr. wepos n. `Wort', pl. auch `Lied, episches Gedicht'; aor. ẹ̄̂pon, ep. éẹ̄pon, lesb. wéi̯pēn, ion. ẹ̄̂pa, inf. ẹ̄pẹ̄̂n, ẹ̄̂pai̯, kret. weipai `sagen, sprechen'; gen. opós, acc. ópa, dat. opí `Stimme, Laut, Wort', óssa, att. ótta f. `(vorbedeutende) Stimme, Gerücht' ; enopǟ́ f. `Geschrei, Schlachtgeschrei, Getöne, Stimme'
Slavic: *vetjь
Latin: vōx, vōcis f. `Laut, Ton, Schall; Stimme; Wort, Rede, Spruch', vocāre `nennen, rufen; anrufen'
Other Italic: Umbr sub-ocau, -ocauu, -oco `anrufen, anbeten'
Celtic: MIr fūaimm `Lärm'
Russ. meaning: говорить
piet-meaning,piet-tokh,piet-ind,piet-avest,piet-arm,piet-greek,piet-slav,piet-germ,piet-lat,piet-ital,piet-celt,piet-rusmean,piet-refer,