hol
Old English
noun
Definitions
- a hole, a hollow
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Germanic *hulą (hollow space, hole, cavity, hollow), *hulaz (hollow, hole).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*hulaz
Gloss
hollow, hole
Concept
Semantic Field
Spatial relations
Ontological Category
Property
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- -coel English
- challenge English
- challengeable English
- challengee English
- challengeless English
- challenger English
- challengest English
- challengeth English
- challenging English
- counterchallenge English
- dechallenge English
- hole English
- megachallenge English
- mischallenge English
- multichallenge English
- nonchallenge English
- overchallenge English
- postchallenge English
- rechallenge English
- subchallenge English
- superchallenge English
- syringocoele English
- underchallenge English
- whole English
- hohl German
- κοίλωμα Ancient Greek
- κοιλία Ancient Greek
- κοῖλος Ancient Greek
- *kowilos Proto-Indo-European
- *kuH- Proto-Indo-European
- hul Norwegian Bokmål
- *hulaz Proto-Germanic
- *hulą Proto-Germanic
- チャレンジ Japanese
- fox Old English
- foxhol Old English
- hāl Old English
- chalenge Middle English
- foxhol Middle English
- helþe Middle English
- hol Middle English
- hole Middle English
- hol Old Norse
- holr Old Norse
- holur Icelandic
- hol Old High German
- *hol Old Dutch
- hol Alemannic German
- 챌린지 Korean
- hol Old Frisian