blæst
Danish
/blɛst/, /blɛːst/
noun
Definitions
- wind
- windy weather
Etymology
Derived from Old Norse blástr (blast, swelling) root from Proto-Indo-European *bʰleh₁- (blow, bleat, swell, blow up, cry, yellow, surge, overflow, run, puff up, blue, inflate, grey).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*bʰleh₁-
Gloss
blow, bleat, swell, blow up, cry, yellow, surge, overflow, run, puff up, blue, inflate, grey
Concept
Semantic Field
Motion
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Kanji
黄
Emoji
🌪️ 🌬️ 🍃 🌬️
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- inflate English
- cōnflātus Latin
- flemen Latin
- florus Latin
- fluō Latin
- flō Latin
- īnflātiō Latin
- bleiten Dutch, Flemish
- inflatie Dutch, Flemish
- *bʰel- Proto-Indo-European
- *bʰleh₁- Proto-Indo-European
- *blēaną Proto-Germanic
- *blēdrǭ Proto-Germanic
- *blēsaną Proto-Germanic
- *blēstaz Proto-Germanic
- *blēstuz Proto-Germanic
- *blētijaną Proto-Germanic
- *blēwaz Proto-Germanic
- fløyt Norwegian Nynorsk
- blása Old Norse
- blástr Old Norse
- *blějati Proto-Slavic
- blostre Old French
- flahute Old French
- blástur Icelandic
- blase Middle Dutch
- blasen Middle Dutch
- bleren Middle Dutch
- flatulent Middle French
- *flāō Proto-Italic
- *flēō Proto-Italic
- blaitand Scots
- *(s)blèwsa Proto-Albanian