واڳِيُون جٖي وَرَنِ، تَنِ سَرَتِيُنِ سيڄَ سُھاءِ،
تيلاھِين طَعنا ڏيِين، جٖي مُون جِيئَن مُٺِيئَن نَہ ماءِ،
آرِيءَ جي آڪاھِ، رُلايَسِ روھَنِ ۾.
[ سُر حسيني، ٻاروچا، فراق ۽ وصال، 3 ]
ڄولي پَنھِنجَا ڄَاڻَ
*weik- (aeik)
Proto-Indo-European root meaning "clan, social unit above the household."
It forms all or part of: antoecian; bailiwick; Brunswick; diocese; ecology; economy; ecumenical; metic; nasty; parish; parochial; vicinage; vicinity; viking; villa; village; villain; villanelle; -ville; villein; Warwickshire; wick (n.2) "dairy farm."
It is the hypothetical source of/evidence for its existence is provided by: Sanskrit visah "house," vit "dwelling, house, settlement;" Avestan vis "house, village, clan;" Old Persian vitham "house, royal house;" Greek oikos "house;" Latin villa "country house, farm," vicus "village, group of houses;" Lithuanian viešpats "master of the house;" Old Church Slavonic visi "village;" Gothic weihs "village."
Sources:
- A Dictionary of Selected Synonyms in the Principal Indo-European Languages, University of Chicago (By: Carl Darling Buck) 1988.
- Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (By: Michiel de Vaan) 2008.
- The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots (By: Calvert Watkins) 2000.
- Noun Declension in Indo-European (Sindhueuropaia Deklination Nomnes) By: Carlos Quiles.
- Online Etymology Dictionary (By: Douglas Harper)