मुद्
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Sanskrit
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Proto-Indo-European *mewd- (“to become happy”),[1] whence also Lithuanian mudrùs.
Root
[edit]मुद् • (mud) 1 A
Derived terms
[edit]- Verbal derivations:
- Present: मोदते (modate)
- Perfect: मुमुदे (mumude)
- Periphrastic future: मोदिता (moditā)
- Simple future: मोदिष्यते (modiṣyate)
- Imperative: मोदताम् (modatām)
- Imperfect: अमोदत (amodata)
- Benedictive: मोदिषीष्ट (modiṣīṣṭa)
- Optative: मोदेत (modeta)
- Aorist: अमोदिष्ट (amodiṣṭa)
- Conditional: अमोदिष्यत (amodiṣyata)
References
[edit]- ^ Rix, Helmut, editor (2001), “*meu̯d-”, in Lexikon der indogermanischen Verben [Lexicon of Indo-European Verbs] (in German), 2nd edition, Wiesbaden: Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, →ISBN, page 443
Further reading
[edit]- Monier Williams (1899) “मुद्”, in A Sanskrit–English Dictionary, […], new edition, Oxford: At the Clarendon Press, →OCLC, page 822.
- William Dwight Whitney, 1885, The Roots, Verb-forms, and Primary Derivatives of the Sanskrit Language, Leipzig: Breitkopf and Härtel, page 106