synd
Danish
/søn/
noun
Definitions
- sin
- pity, shame, sorrow
Etymology
Derived from Old Norse synd derived from Proto-Germanic *sundī (something that should not be, sin, crime).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*sundī
Gloss
something that should not be, sin, crime
Concept
Semantic Field
Religion and belief
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- arcsin English
- outsin English
- sin English
- sin-ridden English
- sinful English
- sinhound English
- sinless English
- sinlike English
- sinner English
- sinnest English
- sinneth English
- sinny English
- unsin English
- Modesünde German
- Sünde German
- Sündenbabel German
- Sündenfall German
- Sündenpfuhl German
- Sünder German
- Sündflut German
- Sündopfer German
- Todsünde German
- Ursünde German
- sieben Todsünden German
- sündhaft German
- sündig German
- sündteuer German
- *h₁es- Proto-Indo-European
- synd Norwegian Bokmål
- *sundijō Proto-Germanic
- *sundī Proto-Germanic
- *sunjō Proto-Germanic
- synd Swedish
- synd Norwegian Nynorsk
- firensynn Old English
- synbot Old English
- synful Old English
- synleas Old English
- synn Old English
- synnig Old English
- sinne Middle English
- synd Old Norse
- syndugr Old Norse
- flod Danish
- syndflod Danish
- syndig Danish
- synd Icelandic
- sunta Old High German
- synd Faroese
- sundia Old Saxon
- sönn Westrobothnian