Proto-IE: *gʷer-, *gur-
Meaning: to gather
Tokharian: B akart(t)e 'near' ( = Lit. gret-) (Adams 1); kār- 'gather' (153)
Old Indian: gaṇá- m. `flock, troop, multitude'; jarante (3 p. pl.) `to come near, approach'
Old Greek: agéi̯rō, hom. pf. ǟgeréthonto, ǟgeréthesthai̯ `versammeln'; agorǟ́ f. `(Volks)versammlung, -splatz, Markt, Handel, Verkehr', ágoro-s m. `Versammlung'; ágüri-s `Versammlung, Menge', agürmó-s m., ágürma n. `Sammlung', agǘrtǟ-s `Bettler'; agrétǟ-s `Sammler'; ágersi-s `das Versammeln, Mustern des Heeres', agermó-s m. `das Sammeln von Geld, Truppen usw.', agértǟ-s m. `Einkassierer' || pl. gárgara 'heaps, lots, plenty', gargái̯rō 'to swarm with', gérgera (gérgena cod.) = pollá Hsch.
Latin: grex, gregis m. (/f.) `Herde, Haufe, Schar'
Celtic: Ir graig, gen. grega `Pferdeherde'; Cymr gre `Pferdeherde'
Russ. meaning: собирать, сбивать в стадо
Comments: Lith gur̃gula-s, gurgulī̃-s `Verdickung, Knoten, Eiszapfen, Schaumblase, dichter Schwarm (von Vögeln)', gùrguolē, gurguõlē, dial. gérguolē `Menge, Masse (von Leuten, Bienen), Tross, Train' may be derived from this root.
piet-meaning,piet-tokh,piet-ind,piet-greek,piet-slav,piet-balt,piet-germ,piet-lat,piet-celt,piet-rusmean,piet-refer,piet-comment,