PIE Roots
Eddas
Beowulf
Mahabharata
Rules
100

The root meaning "to carry"

(Name one variation of the root for 100 more points)

PIE:*Bher


100

This trickster god, central to many Eddaic tales, causes both mischief and disaster for the gods—most notably the death of Baldr.

Who is Loki

100

This is the name of the monster Beowulf defeats in Hrothgar’s mead hall.

Who is Grendel?

100

This warrior-prince hesitates to fight his own kin at the start of the Mahabharata’s great war.

Who is Arjuna

100

This term refers to the systematic vowel changes seen in related Indo-European words like sing, sang, and sung, and was first described by 19th-century linguists studying Proto-Indo-European roots.

What is Ablaut

200

Root meaning death

(Name one variation of the root for 100 more points)

PIE:*Mr-to

200

This hammer-wielding god, known for his strength and protection of humanity, regains his stolen weapon in the poem Þrymskviða.

Who is Thor

200

Beowulf comes from this people, who live across the sea from the Danes.

Who are the Geats?

200

This charioteer, who also happens to be a god, delivers a sermon on duty and detachment in the Bhagavad Gita.

Who is Krishna

200

This sound shift, named after a famous German philologist, explains why Latin pater corresponds to English father, through regular changes in Indo-European stop consonants.

What is Grimm's Law

300

PIE:*H1ekwos


Horse

300

This apocalyptic event, described in both Eddas, foretells the death of gods like Odin and Thor and the rebirth of the world.

What is Ragnarök?

300

After Grendel dies, Beowulf must fight this vengeful relative.

Who is Grendel's mother

300

The great war of the Mahabharata is fought between these two family factions.

Who are the Pandavas and the Kauravas?

300

This principle says that PIE roots typically consist of a single syllable with a structure of consonant-vowel-consonant, helping define what counts as a valid root.

Root structure rule (CVC)

400

PIE: *Medhu

Mead

400

This god of poetry, war, and wisdom sacrificed an eye at Mímir’s well to gain knowledge.

Who is Odin

400

This object is forged by giants, fails Beowulf in battle, and symbolizes the limits of human craftsmanship.

What is the sword "Hrunting"

400

This dice game, rigged by Duryodhana’s uncle, leads to the exile of the Pandavas.

What is the game of dice at Hastinapura?

400

Though not directly attested in most Indo-European languages, these hypothesized PIE sounds explain unexpected vowel coloring and lengthening, and are represented with symbols like h₁, h₂, and h₃.

What are Laryngeals

500

Root meaning "come/go"

(Name one variation of the root for 100 more points)


PIE: *Gwem


500

This dwarf-made object, described in the Prose Edda, is the most powerful weapon of the gods and always returns to its owner's hand.

What is Mjölnir (Thor’s hammer)?

500

This is the final monster Beowulf faces at the end of his life.

What is a Dragon

500

This queen and shared wife of the Pandavas is publicly humiliated in court, sparking calls for vengeance and justice.

Who is Draupadi?

500

This rule in PIE explains how certain syllables become "lengthened" when followed by a particular type of consonant, a phenomenon that is crucial to understanding the alternation between short and long vowels in PIE roots.

What is "compensatory lengthening"