LOGOI

The corpus record — Sanskrit

reṣe

1. reṣ cl. 1. Ā. reṣate ( pf. rireṣe &c. Gr. ), to howl, roar, yell (as wolves), Dhātup. xvi, 19 (others ‘to neigh’ or ‘to utter any inarticulate sound’).

Every figure on this page is a live query of the corpus record.

Where it lives

What it meant — Monier-Williams

1. reṣ

1. reṣ cl. 1. Ā. reṣate ( pf. rireṣe &c. Gr. ), to howl, roar, yell (as wolves), Dhātup. xvi, 19 (others ‘to neigh’ or ‘to utter any inarticulate sound’).

2. reṣ

2. reṣ mfn. ( nom. reṭ; cf. 2. rej) any animal that howls or yells or neighs, howling, neighing, W.

In the wild

Where it came from

  • Mayrhofer, Etymologisches Worterbuch des Altindoarischen (EWAia) Treated in Mayrhofer, Etymologisches Worterbuch des Altindoarischen (EWAia) s.v. res (vol. 3, scan p. 926; entry #18185).

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Sanskrit corpus record built from GRETIL sources (citations and statistics; GRETIL running text is not redistributable). Passage text, where shown, from the Digital Corpus of Sanskrit (CC BY 4.0). Dictionary senses from Monier-Williams (1899, public domain), via the Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries.