kell
Breton
/ˈkɛlː/
noun
Definitions
- testicle
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin cōleus (scrotum, sack, testicle, testicles, a leather bag) derived from Ancient Greek κολεός (sheath, a sheath, scabbard).
Origin
Ancient Greek
κολεός
Gloss
sheath, a sheath, scabbard
Concept
Semantic Field
Basic actions and technology
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- coleoptile English
- coleus English
- hail English
- hail shaft English
- hail storm English
- hailer English
- hailest English
- haileth English
- hailfall English
- haillike English
- hailshot English
- hailstone English
- hailstorm English
- haily English
- *coleūtus Latin
- *cōlea Latin
- *cōleō, *coleo, cōleōnem Latin
- *cōleō, *cōleōnem Latin
- *cōleōnem Latin
- coleus Latin
- culleus Latin
- cōleus Latin
- coléoptile French
- κολεός Ancient Greek
- *ḱel- Proto-Indo-European
- hayle Middle English
- coille Old French
- coillon Old French
- coi Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- κολεός Greek (modern)
- caill Welsh
- ceillgwd Welsh
- ceilliau Welsh
- coleohominis Translingual
- colj Aromanian
- coljiu Aromanian
- divgell Breton
- kelloù Breton
- diwgell Cornish
- kell Cornish
- kellgowser Cornish