Sanskrit edit

Alternative scripts edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Indo-European *peys- (to grind, crush). Cognate with Proto-Slavic *pьxati (push, shove), Lithuanian pìsti (to fuck); Latin pinsō (beat, pound) whence ultimately English pestle (via a French borrowing), pesto.

Pronunciation edit

Root edit

पिष् (piṣ)

  1. to crush, grind, pound
  2. to bruise, hurt, destroy, injure

Derived terms edit

Primary Verbal Forms
Secondary Forms
Non-Finite Forms
Derived Nominal Forms
Prefixed Root Forms

References edit

  • Monier Williams (1899) “पिष्”, in A Sanskrit–English Dictionary, [], new edition, Oxford: At the Clarendon Press, →OCLC, page 628, column 3.
  • Arthur Anthony Macdonell (1893) “पिष्”, in A practical Sanskrit dictionary with transliteration, accentuation, and etymological analysis throughout, London: Oxford University Press
  • William Dwight Whitney, 1885, The Roots, Verb-forms, and Primary Derivatives of the Sanskrit Language, Leipzig: Breitkopf and Härtel, page 097
  • Otto Böhtlingk, Richard Schmidt (1879-1928) “पिष्”, in Walter Slaje, Jürgen Hanneder, Paul Molitor, Jörg Ritter, editors, Nachtragswörterbuch des Sanskrit [Dictionary of Sanskrit with supplements] (in German), Halle-Wittenberg: Martin-Luther-Universität, published 2016