skutæ-

  • 101Skutari — /skuˈtari/ (say skooh tahree), /ˈskutəri/ (say skoohtuhree) noun → Scutari (def. 1) …

  • 102skauta- — *skauta germ., Substantiv: nhd. Zipfel, Keil, Ecke, Schoß ( Maskulinum) (1); ne. corner, wedge (Neutrum), lap (Neutrum); Rekontruktionsbasis: got., an., mhd., ae., afries., anfrk …

    Germanisches Wörterbuch

  • 103skutela — *skutela germ., Substantiv: nhd. Schüssel; ne. bowl (Neutrum); Rekontruktionsbasis: ae., as., ahd.; Interferenz: Lehnwort lat. scutella; Etymologie: s …

    Germanisches Wörterbuch

  • 104skūtjō- — *skūtjō , *skūtjōn germ.?, Substantiv: nhd. Schute, Schiff; ne. ship (Neutrum); Rekontruktionsbasis: afries.; Etymologie: unbekannt; Weiterleben: afries. skūt e 1?, Femininum …

    Germanisches Wörterbuch

  • 105bhā̆ u-1 : bhū̆ - —     bhā̆ u 1 : bhū̆     English meaning: to hit     Deutsche Übersetzung: ‘schlagen, stoßen”     Material: a) With present formation d : Lat. fūstis (*bhūd sti s) “ a knobbed stick, cudgel, staff, club “ (= Gaul. būstis in aprov. bust “ tree… …

    Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary

  • 106sheet — ‘cloth’ [OE] and sheet ‘rope attached to a sail’ [OE] are distinct words, although they have a common ancestor. This was the Germanic base *skaut , *skut ‘project’, which also produced English scot free, scuttle ‘sink a ship’, shoot, shot, shout …

    Word origins

  • 107shoot — [OE] Like sheet, shout, shut, and perhaps skit [15], shoot goes back ultimately to the prehistoric Germanic base *skeut , *skaut , *skut ‘project’. This formed the basis of a verb *skeutan, which evolved into German schiessen, Dutch schieten,… …

    Word origins

  • 108shout — [14] The origins of shout are disputed. One school of thought traces it back to the prehistoric Germanic base *skeut , *skaut , *skut ‘project’ (source of English sheet and shoot), as if its etymological meaning were ‘throw one’s voice out… …

    Word origins

  • 109shut — [OE] Shut comes ultimately from the same prehistoric Germanic base (*skaut , *skeut , *skut ‘project’) that produced English shoot, and its underlying etymological reference is to the ‘shooting’ of a bolt across a door to fasten it. Its immediate …

    Word origins

  • 110shuttle — [OE] A shuttle is etymologically something that is ‘shot’. Indeed, the word’s Old English precursor scytel meant ‘arrow’ or ‘dart’. It comes ultimately from the prehistoric Germanic base *skaut , *skeut , *skut ‘project’, which also produced… …

    Word origins