Alphonse
English
proper noun
Etymology
Borrowed from French Alphonse derived from Spanish, Castilian Alfonso derived from Proto-Germanic *Aþalafunsaz, *aþalaz (noble) + Proto-Germanic *funsaz (ready, eager, willing).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*funsaz
Gloss
ready, eager, willing
Concept
Semantic Field
Time
Ontological Category
Property
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Adel English
- Adell English
- Alfonso English
- Alphonsus Latin
- Adel German
- Alfonso Italian
- Adèle French
- Alphonse French
- Alphonsine French
- Alfonso Spanish, Castilian
- Alfónsez Spanish, Castilian
- alfonsino Spanish, Castilian
- *pn̥tstós Proto-Indo-European
- *átta Proto-Indo-European
- *Aþalafunsaz Proto-Germanic
- *aþalaz Proto-Germanic
- *funsaz Proto-Germanic
- fus Old English
- fūs Old English
- Æþelred Old English
- æþele Old English
- fúss Old Norse
- ōðal Old Norse
- aðal- Icelandic
- Alfonso Cebuano
- Adalheidis Old High German
- adal Old High German
- athal Old Saxon
- Alfonz Slovak
- eal Western Frisian