mester
Danish
noun
Definitions
- master
- champion
- guru
Etymology
Derived from Old Norse meistari derived from Middle Low German meister derived from Old Saxon mēstar derived from Old French maistre (master) derived from Latin magister (master, teacher, chief, head, a master, director, etc, leader, superior).
Origin
Latin
magister
Gloss
master, teacher, chief, head, a master, director, etc, leader, superior
Concept
Semantic Field
Social and political relations
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
頭
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- magister English
- maisteri Finnish
- *maester Latin
- magister Latin
- magisterium Latin
- magistralis Latin
- magistrum, magister Latin
- magistrālis Latin
- Magister German
- Meister German
- mester Hungarian
- maestro Italian
- méster Italian
- magister Dutch, Flemish
- maestro Spanish, Castilian
- magíster Spanish, Castilian
- *-teros Proto-Indo-European
- *méǵh₂s Proto-Indo-European
- magister Norwegian Bokmål
- mester Norwegian Bokmål
- magister Polish
- magister Norwegian Nynorsk
- meister Norwegian Nynorsk
- mægester Old English
- mægester, mæġester Old English
- mǣster Old English
- maister Middle English
- meistari Old Norse
- borg Danish
- borgmester Danish
- politi Danish
- politimester Danish
- skrædder Danish
- skræddermester Danish
- verden Danish
- verdensmester Danish
- maistre Old French
- maistrie Old French
- meistari Icelandic
- măiestru Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- meistar Old High German
- magister Old Irish
- meistari Faroese
- maîte Norman
- maître Norman
- meister Middle High German
- mashtroj Albanian
- maistre Middle French
- maestría Old Portuguese
- borgemēster Middle Low German
- meister Middle Low German
- mêstar Old Saxon
- mēstar Old Saxon
- mēstar, mestar Old Saxon
- mæstare Old Swedish
- magister Romansh
- maestre Old Occitan
- мастеръ Old East Slavic
- maesse Old Spanish
- maestro Venetian
- μαΐστωρ gkm
- borgmesteri Kalaallisut, Greenlandic
- mwaisse Walloon
- magistr Crimean Tatar
- moître Bourguignon
- magester Old Latin
- maestr Gallo
- moaite Picard