orgán
Czech
/orɡaːn/
noun
Definitions
- organ part of an organism
- authority, body functional part of a government or an organization, organized group of people
Etymology
Derived from German Organ derived from Latin organum (organ, implement, instrument, tool, engine, musical instrument) derived from Ancient Greek ὄργανον (tool, instrument, also an organ of sense apprehension, an organ of the body, an instrument, organ, also a musical instrument, an organ, implement).
Origin
Ancient Greek
ὄργανον
Gloss
tool, instrument, also an organ of sense apprehension, an organ of the body, an instrument, organ, also a musical instrument, an organ, implement
Concept
Semantic Field
Basic actions and technology
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
具
Emoji
⚒️ ⚓️ ⚗️ ⚙️ ⛏️ ✂️ 🎛️ 🔍️ 🔎 🔥 🔦 🔧 🔨 🔩 🔪 🔫 🔬 🔭 🔮 🗜️ 🛠️ 🧰 🪚 🪛
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- organism English
- organon English
- organum English
- organa Latin
- organizare, organizo Latin
- organizo Latin
- organizo, organizāre Latin
- organizō Latin
- organum Latin
- Geschlechtsorgan German
- Organ German
- Organversagen German
- organo Italian
- organe French
- orgue French
- о́рган Russian
- орга́н Russian
- орган Russian
- muérgano Spanish, Castilian
- órgano Spanish, Castilian
- ὄργανον Ancient Greek
- *werǵ- Proto-Indo-European
- *wérǵom Proto-Indo-European
- organ Norwegian Bokmål
- órgão Portuguese
- organ Norwegian Nynorsk
- organum Middle English
- orgán Irish
- orgánach Irish
- orgánacht Irish
- organe Old French
- orgue Catalan, Valencian
- òrgan Catalan, Valencian
- orgo Galician
- όργανο Greek (modern)
- organe Middle Dutch
- organo Ido
- орган Bulgarian
- orqan Azerbaijani
- орган Macedonian
- muérganu Asturian
- vuarzine Friulian
- orgel Old Frisian
- ὄργανος gkm
- אורגנון Aramaic