meteseax
Old English
noun
Definitions
- knife, especially one used to cut food
Etymology
Inherited from *matisahs (food knife, knife used for cutting food) affix from Old English mete (food, meat) + Old English seax (an instrument for cutting, dirk, a knife, a short sword, dagger, hip-knife, knife).
Origin
Old English
seax
Gloss
an instrument for cutting, dirk, a knife, a short sword, dagger, hip-knife, knife
Concept
Semantic Field
Food and drink
Ontological Category
Classifier
Emoji
🍴 🍽️ 🔪 🗡️
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- *meh₂d- Proto-Indo-European
- *matiz Proto-Germanic
- *sahsą Proto-Germanic
- flæscmete Old English
- handseax Old English
- læceseax Old English
- mete Old English
- meteleas Old English
- metesacca Old English
- metesocn Old English
- meteswamm Old English
- metetid Old English
- meteþearfende Old English
- meteþegn Old English
- seax Old English
- ædreseax Old English
- meete Middle English
- mete Middle English
- sax Middle English
- mezzeres Old High German
- mezzisahs Old High German
- *matisahs gmw-pro
- *metisas Old Dutch
- metisahs Old Saxon