23.12.2012 Views

The Pali Text Society's Pali-English Dictionary

The Pali Text Society's Pali-English Dictionary

The Pali Text Society's Pali-English Dictionary

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Pat!peti<br />

Pat!peti [pa+t!peti, Caus. of tap] scorch, burn fiercely Vv 795 (=ativiya d"peti VvA 307). Sdhp 573.<br />

Pat!yati<br />

Pat!yati [in form=pa+t!yati, diff. in meaning; not sufficiently expld, see Kern, Toev. p. 29 s. v. It is<br />

probably a distorted *sph!&ayati: see under pharati, phalaka and ph!teti] to be spread out, intrs. to spread (?)<br />

A iv.97 (kodho p., as if fr. pat); J iii.283 (C. nikkhamati, as if fr. t%, Kern. trsls "to be for sale").<br />

Pat!reti<br />

Pat!reti [Caus. of patarati] to make go forth, to bring over or through M i.225; A iii.432 (v. l. M. pakaroti).<br />

-- aor. pat!rayi in meaning "strive" at J iii.210 (=patarati v!yamati C. but Rhys Davids. "to get away<br />

from"); as "assert" at J v.117.<br />

Pati<br />

Pati1 [Ved. pati, Av. paitis lord, husband; Gr. po/sis husband, Lat. potis, potens, possum, hos -- pes; Goth.<br />

br(p -- faps bridegroom, hunda faps centurion, Lith. p!ts husband] lord, master, owner, leader. -- 1. in<br />

general D iii.93 (khett!na' p. gloss adhipati). Mostly -- ˚; see under gavam˚, gaha˚, d!na˚, y(tha˚, sen!˚. --<br />

2. husband S i.210; Sn 314; J iii.138; PvA 161. See also sapatika (with her husband), patibbat! & patika. --<br />

kula her husband's clan ThA 283; VvA 206; -- devat! a devoted wife J iii.406; VvA 128.<br />

Pati<br />

Pati2 (indecl.) [Vedic prati etc.) a doublet of pa&i; both often found side by side; pati alone always as prep.<br />

(with acc.) and as prefix with sth! (pa&i&&h!ti, pati&&hita etc.). All cases are referred to the form with pa&i˚,<br />

except in the case of pati&&h˚. <strong>The</strong> more frequent cases are the foll.: patik!ra, ˚ku&ati, ˚caya, ˚dissati,<br />

˚nandati, ˚manteti, ˚m!neti, ˚ruddha, ˚r(pa, ˚l"na, ˚sall!na, etc. ˚sibbati, ˚sevati, ˚ssata, ˚ssaya, ˚ssava.<br />

Patika<br />

Patika (adj.) [only f. patik! and only as -- ˚] having a husband in mata˚ "with husband dead," a widow Th 2,<br />

221 (=vidhuva ThA 179); J v.103 (ap˚ without husband, v. l. for appat"ta, C. explns by ass!mika). pavuttha˚<br />

(a woman) whose husband lives abroad Vin ii.268; iii.83; Miln 205 (pavuttha˚). See also pañcapatika &<br />

sapatika.<br />

Patika<br />

Patika at Vism 28 is to be read p!tika (vessel, bowl, dish).<br />

Pati&&hahati<br />

Pati&&hahati (& Pati&&h!ti) [pa&i+sth!] to stand fast or firmly, to find a support in (loc.), to be established<br />

(intrs.), to fix oneself, to be set up, to stay; aor. pati&&hahi DhA iii.175 (sot!pattiphale), PvA 42 (id.), 66<br />

(id.); VvA 69 (sakad!g!miphale); and pati&&h!si Miln 16. -- fut. ˚&&hahissati J v.458 (˚hessati); DhA iii.171.<br />

-- ger. pati&&h!ya Sn 506; J ii.2 (rajje); iii.52; v.458 (rajje); Miln 33; PvA 142. -- pp. pati&&hita (q. v.). <br />

Caus. pati&&h!peti (q. v.).<br />

Pati&&h!

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!