wiþþe
Old English
noun
Definitions
- tie, band
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Germanic *wiþjǭ derived from Proto-Indo-European *weyt- (switch, branch, that which winds bends, something twisted, whip, rod).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*weyt-
Gloss
switch, branch, that which winds bends, something twisted, whip, rod
Concept
Semantic Field
The physical world
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
棒
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- viticulture English
- wythe English
- viteus Latin
- vitifolius Latin
- vītis Latin
- aarswis Dutch, Flemish
- wis Dutch, Flemish
- wiskunde Dutch, Flemish
- wisse Dutch, Flemish
- viticulture French
- viticultura Spanish, Castilian
- ἰτέα Ancient Greek
- *wey- Proto-Indo-European
- *weyt- Proto-Indo-European
- *wéh₁itis Proto-Indo-European
- ved Norwegian Bokmål
- viti- Portuguese
- *wissaz Proto-Germanic
- *wiþiz Proto-Germanic
- *wiþjō Proto-Germanic
- *wiþjǭ Proto-Germanic
- *wiþr- Proto-Germanic
- *wiþrą Proto-Germanic
- *wīdaz Proto-Germanic
- ved Norwegian Nynorsk
- féith Irish
- við Old Norse
- viðja Old Norse
- ved Danish
- vis Old French
- viz Old French
- wisse Middle Dutch
- wit Old High German
- Vitis Translingual
- vito Ido
- féith Old Irish
- við Faroese
- *withtha Old Dutch
- *vicca Proto-Finnic
- *wēt(t)ā Proto-Celtic
- wä Westrobothnian
- wið Elfdalian
- vis Piedmontese