Versal
German (Berlin)
[vɛʁˈzaːl]
noun
Definitions
- capital letter
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin versus (against, verse, turned, line, changed, row, toward, a line in writing, line of writing, facing, and in poetry a verse, having been turned, slope, towards, furrow).
Origin
Latin
versus
Gloss
against, verse, turned, line, changed, row, toward, a line in writing, line of writing, facing, and in poetry a verse, having been turned, slope, towards, furrow
Concept
Semantic Field
Basic actions and technology
Ontological Category
Property
Kanji
線
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- verse English
- versus Finnish
- *versicus Latin
- introrsum Latin
- quorsum Latin
- versalis Latin
- versiculus Latin
- versiformis Latin
- versus Latin
- vers Hungarian
- verzál Hungarian
- verso Italian
- versus Italian
- Versailles French
- univers French
- vers French
- verso Spanish, Castilian
- *wert- Proto-Indo-European
- *wértti Proto-Indo-European
- vers Norwegian Bokmål
- verso Portuguese
- vers Swedish
- wiersz Polish
- fers Old English
- versus Middle English
- vers Old Norse
- vers Old French
- vers Serbo-Croatian
- vers Catalan, Valencian
- viers Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- gwers Welsh
- fers Old High German
- vers Middle High German
- vjershë Albanian
- vers Old Dutch