stikiz
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steig- — To stick; pointed. Partly blended with stegh . Derivatives include stitch, ticket, instinct, stigma, tiger, and steak. I. Zero grade form *stig . 1. stickleback, from … Universalium
stitch — [OE] Stitch was originally a noun, meaning ‘sting, prick’ (a sense which survives in the very specialized application to a ‘pain in the side, caused by exertion’). It came from a prehistoric Germanic *stikiz, which was formed from the base *stik… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
stitch — (n.) O.E. stice a prick, puncture, from P.Gmc. *stikiz, from the root of STICK (Cf. stick) (v.). The sense of sudden, stabbing pain in the side was in late O.E. The verb is first recorded early 13c., to stab, pierce, also to fasten or adorn with… … Etymology dictionary
stiki- — *stiki , *stikiz germ., stark. Maskulinum (i): nhd. Stich; ne. stitch (Neutrum); Rekontruktionsbasis: got., ae., afries., as., ahd.; Hinweis: s. *stekan; Etymologie … Germanisches Wörterbuch
stitch — [OE] Stitch was originally a noun, meaning ‘sting, prick’ (a sense which survives in the very specialized application to a ‘pain in the side, caused by exertion’). It came from a prehistoric Germanic *stikiz, which was formed from the base *stik… … Word origins