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Some possible cognates

Meaning Proto-Indo-European Proto-Indo-European examples Proto-Uralic Proto-Uralic examples
first person singular *-m Sanskrit -m, Old Persian -m, Latin -m, Oscan -m. *-m Finnish -n (-n < -m), Cheremis -m, Mansi -m, Udmurt -m; Yurak -m, Tavgi -m.
first person plural *-me Lithuanian -me, Sanskrit -ma, Greek -men. *-me Finnish -me, Saami -mek (preterite); Tavgi -mu’, Kamassian -bɛ’.
second person singular *-s (active) Sanskrit -s, Greek -s, Latin -s, Gothic -s, Hittite -s. *-t Finnish -t, Mordvin -t, Cheremis -t.
*-tHa (perfect) Greek -tʰa, Sanskrit -tʰa.
second person plural *-te Greek -te, Old Church Slavic -te. *-te Finnish -te, Saami -dek (preterite), Cheremis -dä, Hungarian -tek; Yenisei -δa’.
accusative *-m Sanskrit -m, Old Persian -m, Latin -m, Oscan -m. *-m Finnish -n (-n < -m), Cheremis -m, Mansi -m; Yurak -m, Kamassian -m, Ket -m.
ablative *-od Sanskrit tasmād 'from this', Old Latin meritōd 'deservedly'. *-ta Finnish -ta ~ -tä, Mordvin -do ~ -de, Veps -d.
nominative–accusative plural *-es (nominative plural) Greek -es, Sanskrit -as. *-t Finnish -t, Mordvin -t, Udmurt -t; Selkup -t.
*-n̥s (accusative plural) < *-m̥ (acc.sg.) + *-(e)s (pl.) Greek trí-ns, Gothic sunu-ns.
oblique plural *-i (pronominal plural, as in *we-i- 'we' *to-i- 'those') Gothic wei-s, Sanskrit vay-ám; Greek toí, Avestan tōi. *-i Saami -i, Finnish -i; Hungarian -i- (e.g. hajó 'ship', hajó-m 'my ship', hajó-i-m 'my ships').
dual *-H₁ A lost consonant has lengthened the final vowel, as in Sanskrit tā́ nominative–accusative dual versus tá-m accusative singular. *-k Mansi , Selkup -qy.
'and' (postposed conjunction) *-kʷe Latin -que, Greek te, Sanskrit -ca, etc. *-ka ~ *-kä Finnish -kä in ei ... eikä 'neither ... nor', Saami -ge, Mordvin (Moksha) -ka, Votyak -ke, Komi / Zyrian -kȯ, etc.
negative particle 'not' *ne Latin ne-, Greek ne-, Sanskrit , Old High German and Old English ne ~ ni, etc. *ne Hungarian ne/nem, Cheremis / Mari nõ-, ni-, Votyak / Udmurt ni-, etc.
'I, me' *me 'me' (accusative) Greek me (enclitic). *mun, *mina 'I' Finnish minä, Estonian mina, Nenets /mønʲə/.[1] Uralic reconstruction *mun.
*mene 'my' (genitive) Old Persian mana, Old Church Slavic mene, Welsh men, etc.
'you' (singular) *tu (nominative) Latin , Greek (Attic), tu (Dorian), Lithuanian , Old English þu > archaic English thou, etc. *tun, *tina Finnish sinä (< *tinä), Saami ton, tú-, Mordvin ton, Votyak ton, Zyrian te, accusative tenõ, Hungarian 'you' (singular), ti 'you' (plural), etc. Samoyed: Tavgi tannaŋ, Yeniseian Samoyed tod'i, Selkup tan, tat, Kamassian tan.
*twe (accusative) Greek , Sanskrit tvā (enclitic), Avestan θwā (enclitic), Old Church Slavic tebe, etc.
*tewe 'your' (genitive) Sanskrit táva, Avestan tava, Proto-Celtic *towe (< PIE *tewe, with complex developments in the individual languages, Lewis and Pedersen 1989:193-217).
demonstrative pronoun *so 'this, he/she' (animate nominative singular) Gothic sa, Sanskrit , etc. *sä 'he/she, it' Finnish hän (< *sä-n), Saami son, Udmurt so. Samoyed: Nganasan syty.
demonstrative pronoun *to- 'this, that' Greek , Sanskrit tá-, Old Church Slavic to, etc. *tä 'this', *to 'that' Finnish tämä 'this' and tuo 'that (one)', Cheremis ti 'this', Mordvin te 'this', etc.; Udmurt tu 'that', Mordvin to 'that', etc. Cf. Hungarian tétova 'hesitant' (i.e. reluctant to choose between this and that).
'who?' (interrogative pronoun) *kʷi- ~ *kʷe- ~ *kʷo- 'who?, what?' *kʷi-: Hittite kuis (animate nominative singular), kuit (inanimate nominative–accusative singular), Latin quis, quid, Greek tís, , etc.
*kʷe-: Greek téo (Homeric), Avestan čahmāi (dative singular; ča < PIE *kʷe), etc.
*kʷo-: Latin quod, Old Latin quoius > Latin cuius (genitive singular), Old English hwæt > English what, etc.
*ki ~ *ke ~ *ku ~ *ko 'who?, what?' Saami gi ~ 'who?, which?, what sort of?' and gutti 'who?', Mordvin ki 'who?', Cheremis and Mari ke, , 'who?', Hungarian ki 'who?', Finnish kuka 'who?', Komi / Zyrian kod 'which?', Ostyak koji 'who?', kŏti 'what?', etc.
*kʷi/e/o- + -ne 'who?, what?' Latin quidne. *ken 'who?' Finnish ken ~ kene 'who?', Votyak kin 'who?', Udmurt kin 'who?', Komi / Zyrian kin 'who?'. Samoyed: Yurak Samoyed kin 'who?', Southern Nenets kin 'who?'.
'to give' *deH₃- Hittite tā-, Latin , Greek dídōmi, Sanskrit dā-, etc. *toHi- Finnish tuo 'bring', Estonian too- 'bring', Saami duokə- 'sell', Mordvin tuje- 'bring'. Samoyed: Tundra Yurak taš 'give, bring', Enets ta- 'bring', Tavgi tətud'a 'give, bring', etc.
'to moisten' *wed- Sanskrit ud-. *weti 'water' Finnish vesi / vete-, Estonian vesi, Mordvin wət, Udmurt vu, Komi / Zyrian va, Vogul wit, Hungarian víz. Samoyed: Forest Yurak wit, Selkup üt, Kamassian , etc.1
'water' *woder- Hittite wātar (instrumental wēdanda), Umbrian utur (ablative une < *udne), Greek húdōr (genitive húdatos < *hudn̥tos), Sanskrit ud-án- (oblique cases only, nominative–accusative defective), Old Church Slavic voda, Gothic watō (n-stem, dative plural watnam), Old Norse vatn, Old English wæter > English water, etc.2
'name' *nomen- 'name' Latin nōmen, Greek ónoma, Sanskrit nā́man-, Old English nama > English name, etc.3 *nimi 'name' Finnish nimi, Saami nama ~ namma, Mordvin lem, Cheremis lüm, Votyak and Zyrian ńim, Vogul näm, Ostyak nem, Hungarian név. Among the Samoyed languages: Yurak nim, Tavgi ńim, Yenisei Samoyed ńii’, Selkup nim, nem. Compare, in Yukaghir, Kolyma niu and Chuvan nyva.
'fish' *kʷalo- 'large fish' Latin squalus (with s-mobile) 'large sea fish', Old Prussian kalis 'sheatfish', Old English hwæl 'whale' > English whale, etc. *kala 'fish' Finnish kala, Estonian kala, Saami kuollē, Mordvin kal, Cheremis kol, Ostyak kul, Hungarian hal; Enets kare, Koibal kola, etc.
'sister-in-law' *galou- 'husband's sister' Latin glōs (genitive glōris), Greek gálōs, Old Church Slavic zŭlŭva, all meaning 'husband's sister'. *kälɜ 'sister-in-law' Finnish käly 'sister-in-law', Estonian kälī 'husband's brother, wife of husband's brother', Saami kāloji 'sister-in-law', Mordvin kel 'sister-in-law', etc.
'much' *pḷlu- 'much' Greek polú-, Sanskrit purú-, Avestan pouru-, Gothic filu, Old High German filu > German viel, all meaning 'much'.4 *paljɜ 'thick, much' Finnish paljon 'much', Cheremis pülä 'rather a lot', Vogul pāľ 'thick', Yurak palɁ 'thick'. Cp. Tundra Yukaghir pojuoŋ 'many'.
'to go' *kʷelH- *kulki-
'to wash' *mozg- *mośki-
'pot' *pot- *pata

1Some researchers have interpreted Proto-Uralic *wete as a borrowing from Indo-European that may have replaced a native Proto-Uralic synonym *śäčä everywhere but in some of the northern fringes of the family (most prominently Proto-Samic *čācē).

2 This word belongs to the r and n stems, a small group of neuter nouns, from an archaic stratum of Indo-European, that alternate -er (or -or) in the nominative and accusative with -en in the other cases. Some languages have leveled the paradigm to one or the other, e.g. English to the r, Old Norse to the n form.

3 Indo-Europeanists are divided on whether to reconstruct this word as *nom(e)n- or as *H₁nom(e)n-, with a preceding "laryngeal". See Delamarre 2003:50 for a summary of views, with references. The o timbre of the root is assured by, among others, Greek ónoma and Latin nōmen (with secondary vowel lengthening). As roots with inherent o are uncommon in Indo-European, most roots having e as their vowel, the underlying root is probably *nem-. The -(e)n is an affixal particle. Whether the e placed in parentheses is inherently part of the word is disputed but probable.

4 The in Indo-European *pḷlu- represents a vocalic l, a sound found in English in for instance little, where it corresponds to the -le, and metal, where it corresponds to the -al. An earlier form of the Indo-European word was probably *pelu-.