Balto-Slavic and Germanic formations were formed independently of each other. <span class="searchmatch">smõgti</span> (third-person present tense smõgia, third-person past tense smõgė) to strongly...
and prefers to derive the word from <span class="searchmatch">smõgti</span> (“to strongly hit, strike”), citing the collocation árklį smagiai̇̃ <span class="searchmatch">smõgti</span> (“to give the horse a strong blow”)...
smash, to hit, to beat (transitive) to defeat, to kill (to hit): mušti, <span class="searchmatch">smogti</span> (to kill): galabyti, žudyti nouns dobi̇̀mas (action noun) dóbstis (resultant...
штри́кати (škrebtý, štrýkaty). Cognate Polish smagać and probably Lithuanian <span class="searchmatch">smõgti</span> (“to strike, to sway”). IPA(key): [ʃmɐˈɦate] шмага́ти • (šmaháty) impf (perfective...
when I stand on my head. (to hit): daužti (daužyti), dobti, kalti, plakti, <span class="searchmatch">smogti</span>, suduoti, talžyti, trenkti (trankyti) (to pulsate): plakti, pulsuoti, tvinkčioti...
Latin: feriō, battuo, pello, pulso Latvian: sist (lv), iebelzt Lithuanian: <span class="searchmatch">smogti</span> (lt), mušti (lt) Macedonian: удира impf (udira), бие impf (bie) Malay: pukul (ms)...
rich, well-off; severe, angry, harsh; useful, handy; heavy; stifling”), <span class="searchmatch">smōgti</span> (“to hit heavily, strongly; to throw”), Ancient Greek μογέω (mogéō, “I try...