wacor
Old English
adj
Definitions
- watchful, vigilant; awake
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Germanic *wakraz (awake, lively, brave, fresh, watchful, alert) derived from Proto-Indo-European *weǵ- (be strong, awake, lively, be fresh, cheerful, strong, be awake, be cheerful).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*weǵ-
Gloss
be strong, awake, lively, be fresh, cheerful, strong, be awake, be cheerful
Concept
Semantic Field
The body
Ontological Category
Property
Kanji
強
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Wake English
- waker English
- vigil Latin
- vigilia Latin
- wacker German
- wakker Dutch, Flemish
- *weǵ- Proto-Indo-European
- vakker Norwegian Bokmål
- *wahtwō Proto-Germanic
- *wakaną Proto-Germanic
- *wakjaną Proto-Germanic
- *wakraz Proto-Germanic
- *wakāną Proto-Germanic
- vacker Swedish
- vakt Swedish
- hallvardsok Norwegian Nynorsk
- jakobsok Norwegian Nynorsk
- vak Norwegian Nynorsk
- vakker Norwegian Nynorsk
- wakyr Middle English
- bartholomeusmessa Old Norse
- bótolfsvaka Old Norse
- pétrsvaka Old Norse
- svitunsvaka Old Norse
- vakinn Old Norse
- vakr Old Norse
- vǫku Old Norse
- ólafsvaka Old Norse
- wacker Middle Dutch
- wacchar Old High German
- vakur Faroese
- wacker Middle High German
- 𐌳𐌿𐍅𐌰𐌺𐌰𐌽 Gothic
- wacht Middle Low German
- *wáȷ́rakas, *wáȷ́ras Proto-Indo-Iranian
- *wáȷ́ras Proto-Indo-Iranian
- *wā́ȷ́as Proto-Indo-Iranian
- vak Westrobothnian
- 𐎺𐏀𐎼𐎣 Old Persian