<span class="searchmatch">Sanskrit</span> (verb) root in its dictionary order. This is an incomplete list....
In <span class="searchmatch">Sanskrit</span> language, verbs are formed using <span class="searchmatch">roots</span>. A root is a fundamental word to which some "process" is applied and an "ending" is added to resultant...
There are 10 verb root classes in <span class="searchmatch">Sanskrit</span> according to Dhātupāṭha and later grammarians. The name of each class is derived from an exemplary verb root...
<span class="searchmatch">Sanskrit</span> is a highly inflected language with three grammatical genders (liṅga) of masculine, feminine and neuter; three numbers (vacana) of singular, plural...
stop. The prefixes "gal-" and "la-" (with its variants) are often added to <span class="searchmatch">roots</span> or stems. The "gu" is a hard "g," not "gw." Verb affixes include "di-" and...
Frantz, Donald G., and Norma Jean Russell. Blackfoot dictionary of stems, <span class="searchmatch">roots</span>, and affixes. University of Toronto Press, 2017. English Wikipedia has an...
words in Thracian, compared with definitions in English. These <span class="searchmatch">roots</span> are reconstructed <span class="searchmatch">roots</span>, and they are not directly attested. For further information...
also Appendix:Proto-Uralic reconstructions and Appendix:Stable lexical <span class="searchmatch">roots</span> in Proto-Uralic) Ugric languages Hungarian Mansi languages Northern Mansi...
the root nor the conjugation for the other aspects of the verb. Many verb <span class="searchmatch">roots</span> were also defective, and had stems only for one or two of the aspects. More...
etymological root (as in etymon, not root morphemes like Proto-Indo-European <span class="searchmatch">roots</span>) but in the modern language have different phonological forms. Doublets...