hieven
German (Berlin)
/ˈhiːfən/, /ˈhiːvən/
verb-weak
Definitions
- to heave lift and move something with great difficulty
- (nautical) to heave pull up with a rope
Etymology
Derived from English heave derived from Old English hebban derived from Proto-Germanic *habjaną (have, lift, hold, take up, heave, lift heave).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*habjaną
Gloss
have, lift, hold, take up, heave, lift heave
Concept
Semantic Field
Possession
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- heave English
- heaver English
- heavest English
- heaveth English
- heavy English
- heft English
- overheave English
- upheave English
- *keh₂p- Proto-Indo-European
- *kh₂pyé- Proto-Indo-European
- *kh₂pyéti Proto-Indo-European
- *habanaz Proto-Germanic
- *habjaną Proto-Germanic
- hiva Norwegian Nynorsk
- hive Norwegian Nynorsk
- ahebban Old English
- gehebban Old English
- habban Old English
- hebban Old English
- hefeld Old English
- oferhebban Old English
- heven Middle English
- hafa Old Norse
- hefja Old Norse
- habēn Old High German
- havēn Old High German
- hevan Old High German
- hāben Old High German
- 𐌷𐌰𐌱𐌰𐌽 Gothic
- 𐌷𐌰𐍆𐌾𐌰𐌽 Gothic
- *habbjan gmw-pro
- hebben Old Dutch
- heffen Old Dutch
- hyv Westrobothnian
- hebba Old Frisian