vig
Danish
/viːˀ/
noun
Definitions
- inlet arm of the sea
Etymology
Inherited from Old Norse vík (inlet, bay, cove, fjord) inherited from Proto-Germanic *wīkō (village, inlet) derived from Latin vīcus (village, group of houses, street, quarter, estate, town, neighborhood, hamlet).
Origin
Latin
vīcus
Gloss
village, group of houses, street, quarter, estate, town, neighborhood, hamlet
Concept
Semantic Field
Social and political relations
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
村
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Wick English
- Wickfield English
- candlewick English
- constablewick English
- multiwick English
- sheriffwick English
- vicus English
- wick English
- wickie English
- wickless English
- wicklike English
- wickmaker English
- vicinus Latin
- viculus Latin
- vīcus Latin
- vico Italian
- bloemkoolwijk Dutch, Flemish
- buitenwijk Dutch, Flemish
- krottenwijk Dutch, Flemish
- sloppenwijk Dutch, Flemish
- stadswijk Dutch, Flemish
- tuinstadwijk Dutch, Flemish
- tuinwijk Dutch, Flemish
- wijk Dutch, Flemish
- wijkagent Dutch, Flemish
- wijkverpleegkunde Dutch, Flemish
- wijkverpleegkundige Dutch, Flemish
- wijkverpleegster Dutch, Flemish
- wijkverpleger Dutch, Flemish
- *weyk- Proto-Indo-European
- *weyḱ- Proto-Indo-European
- vik Norwegian Bokmål
- *wīkō Proto-Germanic
- Reykjavik Swedish
- vik Swedish
- vik Norwegian Nynorsk
- wīc Old English
- weke Middle English
- vík Old Norse
- víkingr Old Norse
- vík Icelandic
- wijc Middle Dutch
- vík Faroese
- *wīk Old Dutch
- wik Old Saxon
- vik Westrobothnian
- vitg Romansh