læg
Danish
/lɛːˀɡ/, /lɛːˀɡ/, /lɛːˀɣ/, /lɛɡ/, /lɛːˀɣ/
noun
Definitions
- (anatomy) calf of the leg
Etymology
Derived from Old Norse leggr (bone, stalk, leg, bone of the arm leg, calf, hollow tube, lower leg) inherited from Proto-Germanic *lagjaz (thigh, leg).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*lagjaz
Gloss
thigh, leg
Concept
Semantic Field
The body
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
脚
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- airleg English
- blackleg English
- bootleg English
- bowleg English
- boyleg English
- deadleg English
- dogleg English
- foreleg English
- gateleg English
- highleg English
- hogleg English
- interleg English
- leg English
- leg day English
- leg press English
- legbone English
- legcuff English
- legful English
- legged English
- leggie English
- legging English
- leggish English
- leggy English
- leghold English
- leghole English
- legless English
- leglet English
- leglike English
- leglock English
- legman English
- legplate English
- legpuller English
- legroom English
- legshow English
- legside English
- legspan English
- legwear English
- legwork English
- midleg English
- multileg English
- pantleg English
- proleg English
- propleg English
- puffleg English
- redleg English
- rough-legged buzzard English
- roughleg English
- underleg English
- *(H)lak- Proto-Indo-European
- *(ǝ)lak- Proto-Indo-European
- legg Norwegian Bokmål
- *lagjaz Proto-Germanic
- レガース Japanese
- legg Norwegian Nynorsk
- leg Middle English
- leggr Old Norse
- þjóleggr Old Norse
- tillæg Danish
- tillægsord Danish
- leggur Icelandic
- leggur Faroese
- lægger Old Swedish
- lägg Westrobothnian
- lek Tok Pisin
- leg Torres Strait Creole
- lek Samoan Plantation Pidgin