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1 bean
Iwife, so Irish ben, Welsh bun, benyw, Cornish benen, sponsa, Celtic bena$$^, g. bnâs, pl.n. bnâs; Greek gunc/, B$$oeot. Greek baná; Gothic ginô, English queen, Scottish queyn; Sanskrit gnâ.IItouch, Irish beanaim, beat, touch, appertain to, Old Irish benim, pulso, ferio, Breton bena, to cut, Middle Breton benaff, hit; *bina, root bin, bi( Old Irish ro bi, percussit, bithe, perculsus), from Indo-European bhi, bhei, hit; Church Slavonic bija, biti, strike; Old High German bîhal, axe; Greek $$G fitrós, log. Further is root bheid, split, English bite. Usually bean has been referred to Indo-European $$ghen, $$ghon, hit, slay; Greek $$G fen-, slay, $$G epefnon, slew, $$G fónos, slaughter, $$G qeínw, strike; Sanskrit han, hit; but $$gh = Gaelic b is doubtful. -
2 beum
a stroke, cut, taunt, Irish and Old Irish béim, nom.pl. bémen, blow, from the root beng, bong, which appears in buain; cf. ceum from ceng-men, leum from leng-men. This agrees with Cornish bom, blow. Some suggest beid-men or beids-men, root bheid, English bite, which suits Gaelic best as to meaning. The favourite derivation has been *ben-s-men, root ben of bean. -
3 bideag
I II -
4 biodag
См. также в других словарях:
bheid- — bheid English meaning: to prick, pierce Deutsche Übersetzung: ‘spalten” Material: O.Ind. bhinádmi (participle bhindánt = Lat. findēns, bhinná ḥ besides bhittá ḥ = Lat. fissus), bhē dümi ‘split, carve, rupture etc”, bhidyátē “… … Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary
bheid- — To split; with Germanic derivatives referring to biting (hence also to eating and to hunting) and woodworking. Derivatives include bite, bitter, and fission. 1. a. beetle1, bite, from Old English bītan, to bite; b … Universalium
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beißen — kauen * * * bei|ßen [ bai̮sn̩], biss, gebissen: 1. a) <itr.; hat mit den Zähnen (in etwas) eindringen: in den Apfel beißen; ich habe mir/mich aus Versehen auf die Zunge gebissen. b) <itr.; hat mit den Zähnen auf etwas treffen: auf Pfeffer… … Universal-Lexikon
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