have
Danish
/haːvə/, /ha(ːˀ)/, /haːvə/, /haːvə/
noun
Definitions
- garden
- orchard
- allotment
Etymology
Inherited from Old Norse hagi (enclosure) inherited from Proto-Germanic *hagô (hedge, enclosure, pasture, yard).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*hagô
Gloss
hedge, enclosure, pasture, yard
Concept
Semantic Field
Animals
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
牧
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Haig English
- Haweater English
- behave English
- chave English
- had English
- has English
- hast English
- hath English
- havable English
- have English
- haveless English
- haven't English
- havenae English
- havest English
- haw English
- mayhaw English
- mishave English
- possumhaw English
- Habenichts German
- Habgier German
- Hag German
- Recht haben German
- achthaben German
- aufhaben German
- behaben German
- dabeihaben German
- dahaben German
- feilhaben German
- freihaben German
- gernhaben German
- haben German
- häbig German
- lieb haben German
- liebhaben German
- satthaben German
- teilhaben German
- voraushaben German
- vorhaben German
- wahrhaben German
- zuhaben German
- übrighaben German
- Hageland Dutch, Flemish
- doornhaag Dutch, Flemish
- haag Dutch, Flemish
- haagdoorn Dutch, Flemish
- haagspel Dutch, Flemish
- hagenpreek Dutch, Flemish
- hagepreek Dutch, Flemish
- *kaghon Proto-Indo-European
- *kagʰom Proto-Indo-European
- hage Norwegian Bokmål
- haver Portuguese
- *hagô Proto-Germanic
- hage Swedish
- hage Norwegian Nynorsk
- haga Old English
- haven Middle English
- hagi Old Norse
- hefð Old Norse
- børn Danish
- børnehave Danish
- hævd Danish
- havi Esperanto
- hagi Icelandic
- hāge Middle Dutch
- hag Old High German
- hagi Faroese
- haben Middle High German
- *hagō gmw-pro
- *hago Old Dutch
- hago Old Saxon
- hebbian Old Saxon
- haghi Old Swedish
- haga Westrobothnian
- hebben Low German
- leefhebben Low German
- børnehave Kalaallisut, Greenlandic
- abi Sranan Tongo
- hawe Scanian