sjæl
Danish
[ˈɕɛˀl]
noun
Definitions
- soul
Etymology
Derived from Old Danish sial derived from Old Norse sál (soul) derived from Old English sāwol (soul, being, life, spirit) derived from Proto-Germanic *saiwalō (soul, life force).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*saiwalō
Gloss
soul, life force
Concept
Semantic Field
Religion and belief
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
魂
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- besoul English
- cybersoul English
- desoul English
- ensoul English
- insoul English
- neo-soul English
- oversoul English
- soul English
- soul-ale English
- soul-searching English
- soulbond English
- soulboy English
- soulcraft English
- souled English
- souler English
- soulful English
- soulish English
- soulless English
- soullike English
- soulmark English
- soulmate English
- soulscape English
- soulscot English
- soulsick English
- soulster English
- soulwinner English
- soulwinning English
- sowkin English
- unsoul English
- soul Finnish
- Seele German
- Seelenfrieden German
- Seelengröße German
- Seelenklempner German
- Seelentröster German
- Seelenwanderung German
- Soul German
- beseelen German
- entseelen German
- seelenlos German
- seelenruhig German
- seelenvoll German
- seelisch German
- soul Hungarian
- soul Italian
- со́ул Russian
- soul Spanish, Castilian
- ildsjel Norwegian Bokmål
- sjel Norwegian Bokmål
- sjelløs Norwegian Bokmål
- soul Portuguese
- *saiwalō Proto-Germanic
- själ Swedish
- själisk Swedish
- ゼーレ Japanese
- ソウル Japanese
- soul Polish
- sjel Norwegian Nynorsk
- sāwol Old English
- soule Middle English
- sál Old Norse
- besjæle Danish
- besjæling Danish
- ild Danish
- ildsjæl Danish
- soula Esperanto
- soulo Esperanto
- sál Icelandic
- սոուլ Armenian
- sēla Old High German
- sēle Middle High German
- 𐍃𐌰𐌹𐍅𐌰𐌻𐌰 Gothic
- *saiwalu gmw-pro
- sela Old Dutch
- sēla Old Dutch
- sêle Middle Low German
- seola Old Saxon
- sēola Old Saxon
- siel Old Swedish
- sial Old Danish