Woge
German (Berlin)
/ˈvoːɡə/
noun
Definitions
- (chiefly) wave
Etymology
Inherited from Middle High German wāge (wave) derived from Middle Low German wāge (wave) derived from Old Saxon wāg (stormy sea) derived from *wāg derived from Proto-Germanic *wēgaz (wave, storm, motion, water in motion).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*wēgaz
Gloss
wave, storm, motion, water in motion
Concept
Semantic Field
The physical world
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Kanji
嵐
Emoji
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Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- vogue English
- voguer English
- voguey English
- voguing English
- voguish English
- voguism English
- Waage German
- *weǵʰ- Proto-Indo-European
- *wagjaną Proto-Germanic
- *wagōną Proto-Germanic
- *weganą Proto-Germanic
- *wēgaz Proto-Germanic
- flodvåg Swedish
- kortvåg Swedish
- mikrovåg Swedish
- våg Swedish
- vågform Swedish
- vågfunktion Swedish
- våglängd Swedish
- vågmästare Swedish
- vågtal Swedish
- waga Polish
- wecgan Old English
- wæg Old English
- wǣġ Old English
- vágr Old Norse
- váha Czech
- waga Old High German
- wāga Old High German
- wāge Middle High German
- vogue Middle French
- 𐍅𐌰𐌲𐌾𐌰𐌽 Gothic
- 𐍅𐌴𐌲𐍃 Gothic
- *wāg gmw-pro
- wāge Middle Low German
- baaga Cimbrian
- wāg Old Saxon
- váha Slovak
- vagh, vāgh Old Swedish
- waag North Frisian