diu
Corsican
noun
Definitions
- god, deity
Etymology
Inherited from Latin deus (god, deity) inherited from Old Latin deivos (god, deity) inherited from Proto-Italic *deiwos (deity, god) inherited from Proto-Indo-European *deywós (god, the celestial one, deity, shine, god that which belongs to heaven).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*deywós
Gloss
god, the celestial one, deity, shine, god that which belongs to heaven
Concept
Semantic Field
Religion and belief
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
神
Emoji
⛩️ ⛪️ 🕋 🕌 🕍 🤲
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Dis English
- deiparous English
- Deus Latin
- Diana Latin
- deificatio Latin
- deifico Latin
- deificus Latin
- deificāre Latin
- deiformis Latin
- deus Latin
- dives Latin
- edepol Latin
- -ismus German
- Deismus German
- dio Italian
- semidio Italian
- demi-dieu French
- dieu French
- déisme French
- pardieu French
- dios Spanish, Castilian
- Θεοτόκος Ancient Greek
- παν- Ancient Greek
- *deywós Proto-Indo-European
- *dyew- Proto-Indo-European
- deus Portuguese
- *Tīwaz Proto-Germanic
- देव Sanskrit
- deu Old French
- dous Old French
- dio Esperanto
- zeu Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- zo te cuște Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- zău Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- deité Middle French
- deus Old Portuguese
- *dēwos Proto-Celtic
- *daywás Proto-Indo-Iranian
- *deiwos Proto-Italic
- *deiwā Proto-Italic
- dieu Romansh
- dios Asturian
- diu Friulian
- deu Old Occitan
- dios Old Spanish
- deu Sicilian
- diu Sicilian
- *deiwas Proto-Balto-Slavic
- Dyo Ladino
- דיו Ladino
- dye Haitian, Haitian Creole
- dei Bourguignon
- deo Istriot
- deivos Old Latin
- diu Picard
- 𒋾𒉿𒊍 Luwian
- 𐌃𐌄𐌉𐌅𐌏𐌔 Venetic
- deue Volscian