ark
Danish
[ˈɑːɡ̊]
noun
Definitions
- a sheet of paper
Etymology
Borrowed from Middle Low German ark derived from Latin arcus (bow, arc, arch, a bow, curve).
Origin
Latin
arcus
Gloss
bow, arc, arch, a bow, curve
Concept
Semantic Field
Warfare and hunting
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
弧
Emoji
🙇♀️ 🙇♂️ 🎻 🏹 🙇 🙏 🧝
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- arc- English
- arciform English
- arculus English
- arcus English
- gonarcus English
- *arcio Latin
- arca Latin
- arcionem, *arcio Latin
- arcuarius Latin
- arcuatus Latin
- arcuballista Latin
- arcuo Latin
- arcus Latin
- arcārius Latin
- Aortenbogen German
- Bogen German
- Bogenbündel German
- Bogenfenster German
- Bogenlinie German
- Bogenschießen German
- Bogenschütze German
- Ellbogen German
- Fragebogen German
- Geigenbogen German
- Kreisbogen German
- Lichtbogen German
- Papierbogen German
- Regenbogen German
- Spannungsbogen German
- Triumphbogen German
- bogenförmig German
- arcata Italian
- archivolto Italian
- arco Italian
- arbalète French
- аркко́синус Russian
- арккосеканс Russian
- арккосинус Russian
- арккота́нгенс Russian
- арксеканс Russian
- аркси́нус Russian
- аркта́нгенс Russian
- арктангенс Russian
- arco Spanish, Castilian
- *h₂erkʷo- Proto-Indo-European
- arkusz Polish
- arc Old French
- arche Old French
- arko Esperanto
- ark Icelandic
- örk Icelandic
- arc Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- arka Latvian
- boge Middle High German
- ärkēr (in rhyme with mēr), ärker or ærker (in rhyme with der) Middle High German
- hark Albanian
- arco Old Portuguese
- ark Middle Low German
- arcu Aromanian
- arcu Asturian
- arc Friulian
- arc Old Occitan
- arcu Sicilian
- arconbè Venetian