Pfahl
German (Berlin)
/p͡faːl/, /faːl/
noun
Definitions
- (thick) stake, picket, pale
- (heraldiccharge) pale
Etymology
Inherited from Old High German pfāl derived from Latin pālus (stake, prop, pale, post, pole, stay).
Origin
Latin
pālus
Gloss
stake, prop, pale, post, pole, stay
Concept
Semantic Field
The house
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Emoji
✉️ 🏣 🏤 📤️ 📥️ 📦️ 📩 📪️ 📫️ 📮 📯
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Polie English
- alepole English
- antipole English
- beanpole English
- bipole English
- cartpole English
- clodpole English
- counterpole English
- dipole English
- double pole English
- epipole English
- fencepole English
- firepole English
- fishpole English
- flagpole English
- footpole English
- fuckpole English
- headpole English
- hexadecapole English
- hexapole English
- interpole English
- lodgepole English
- meatpole English
- multipole English
- octopole English
- paleopole English
- palus English
- pitchpole English
- polary English
- pole English
- pole dancing English
- pole-smoker English
- poleboat English
- polehead English
- poleless English
- polelike English
- poleman English
- polepiece English
- poler English
- polescreen English
- polesitter English
- polespear English
- polester English
- poletimber English
- poleward English
- polewards English
- polocyte English
- quadripole English
- ridgepole English
- roundpole English
- tail-pole English
- tailpole English
- tentpole English
- tripole English
- paalu Finnish
- impālāre Latin
- impālō Latin
- palaris Latin
- palus Latin
- pālus Latin
- trepalium Latin
- Palstek German
- Stich German
- aquapole Italian
- palo Italian
- pal French
- empalar Spanish, Castilian
- palo Spanish, Castilian
- pole Spanish, Castilian
- *peh₂ǵ- Proto-Indo-European
- *pāǵe- Proto-Indo-European
- *palaz Proto-Germanic
- pal Polish
- pal Old English
- pole Middle English
- pex Old French
- par Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- pfal Old High German
- pfāl Old High German
- Poul Luxembourgish, Letzeburgesch
- pal Middle French
- *pālaz gmw-pro
- pāl Old Dutch
- pao Old Portuguese
- pâl Middle Low German
- *pākslos Proto-Italic
- palu Asturian
- pâl Friulian
- pal Old Occitan
- palissada Old Occitan
- föł Vilamovian