Chaos
German (Berlin)
/ˈkaːɔs/
noun
Definitions
- chaos
Etymology
Derived from Latin chaos (chaos) derived from Ancient Greek χάος (void, vast chasm, chasm, abyss, empty space).
Origin
Ancient Greek
χάος
Gloss
void, vast chasm, chasm, abyss, empty space
Kanji
空
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- antichaos English
- chaogenous English
- chaophilia English
- chaos English
- chaoslike English
- chaotic English
- chaotropic English
- chaotropism English
- homeochaos English
- hyperchaos English
- nonchaos English
- Chaos Latin
- chaos Latin
- chaoticus Latin
- Chaoskampf German
- Chaostheorie German
- Kampf German
- Rasse German
- Rassenchaos German
- Theorie German
- caos Italian
- chaos Dutch, Flemish
- gas Dutch, Flemish
- chaos French
- gaz French
- хаос Russian
- caos Spanish, Castilian
- χάος Ancient Greek
- gass Norwegian Bokmål
- kaos Norwegian Bokmål
- caos Portuguese
- kaos Swedish
- カオス Japanese
- chaos Polish
- gass Norwegian Nynorsk
- kaos Norwegian Nynorsk
- kaos Danish
- chaos Czech
- ĥaoso Esperanto
- haos Serbo-Croatian
- kaos Serbo-Croatian
- каос Serbo-Croatian
- хаос Serbo-Croatian
- caos Catalan, Valencian
- caos Galician
- քաոս Armenian
- caos Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- χάος Greek (modern)
- caos Middle Dutch
- kaoso Ido
- ქაოსი Georgian
- хаос Ukrainian
- caos Romansh