diacon
Old English
noun
Definitions
- deacon
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin diāconus derived from Ancient Greek διᾱ́κονος (servant, minister).
Origin
Ancient Greek
διᾱ́κονος
Gloss
servant, minister
Concept
Semantic Field
Social and political relations
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- archdeacon English
- deacon English
- deaconess English
- deaconhood English
- deaconly English
- deaconry English
- deaconship English
- protodeacon English
- diakoni Finnish
- diakonia Finnish
- diacon Latin
- diaconus Latin
- diāconus Latin
- Diakon German
- diacono Italian
- diaken Dutch, Flemish
- diacre French
- diácono Spanish, Castilian
- διάκονος Ancient Greek
- διᾱ́κονος Ancient Greek
- diakon Norwegian Bokmål
- diácono Portuguese
- diakon Polish
- diakon Norwegian Nynorsk
- diācon Old English
- diakono Esperanto
- diaca Catalan, Valencian
- diacon Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- diakon Indonesian
- diaken Middle Dutch
- decánach Old Irish
- diacre Norman
- ⲇⲓⲁⲕⲱⲛ Coptic
- diakona Malagasy