गम्
Sanskrit
Alternative forms
- गच्छ् (gacch)
Etymology
From Proto-Indo-Aryan *gam-, from Proto-Indo-Iranian *gam-, from Proto-Indo-European *gʷem-. Cognate with Latin veniō, Ancient Greek βαίνω (baínō), Old English cuman (whence English come).
Derived terms
- अध्वगत् (adhvagat, “traveller”)
- अवगन्तोस् (ávagantos, “to descend; to approach; to visit; to obtain; to undertake”)
- गच्छ (gaccha, “lineage”)
- गच्छति (gácchati, “he goes”)
- गति (gáti, “going”)
- गत्वर (gatvara, “going to a place”)
- गन्तव्य (gantavya, “to be accomplished, to be attained”)
- गन्तुम् (gantum, “to go”)
- गन्तृ (gantṛ, “goer, mover, comer”)
- गन्तोस् (gántos, “to go”)
- गम (gama, “going, course”)
- गमन (gámana, “manner of going”)
- गमनीय (gamanīya, “accessible, approachable”)
- गमयितव्य (gamayitavya, “to be spent (time)”)
- गमयितृ (gamayitṛ, “causing to arrive at, leading to”)
- गमिन् (gamin, “intending to go”)
- गमिष्ठ (gámiṣṭha, “most ready to go, most willing to come”)
- गमिष्णु (gamiṣṇú, “going”)
- गम्य (gamya, “approachable, accessible”)
- गामिन् (gāmin, “going anywhere”)
- गामुक (gāmuka, “going”)
- जगत् (jágat, “moving, animal, world”)
- जग्मि (jágmi, “going, being in constant motion”)
- जङ्गम (jaṅgama, “moving, locomotive”)
- जङ्गमन (jaṅgamana, “course”)
- जिगत्नु (jigatnú, “going quickly, fleet”)
- जिगमिषु (jigamiṣu, “intending to go”)
- पूर्वगत्वन् (pūrvagatvan, “going to meet”)
- पृथुग्मन् (pṛthugman, “broad-pathed”)
- सुगन्त्व (sugantva, “easily passed”)
References
- Monier Williams (1899), “गम्”, in A Sanskrit–English Dictionary, […], new edition, Oxford: At the Clarendon Press, OCLC 458052227, page 346.
- William Dwight Whitney, 1885, The Roots, Verb-forms, and Primary Derivatives of the Sanskrit Language, Leipzig: Breitkopf and Härtel, page 34
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