eath
English
adj
Definitions
- (Now) Easy; not hard or difficult.
Etymology
Inherited from Middle English ethe (easy) inherited from Old English īeþe (easy) inherited from Proto-Germanic *auþuz derived from Proto-Indo-European *aut- (empty, lonely).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*aut-
Gloss
empty, lonely
Concept
Semantic Field
Quantity
Ontological Category
Property
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- eath-kent English
- eathful English
- eathlins English
- eathly English
- eathy English
- kent English
- uneath English
- anöden German
- Öde German
- Ödland German
- öde German
- *aut- Proto-Indo-European
- øde Norwegian Bokmål
- *audaz Proto-Germanic
- *auþijaz Proto-Germanic
- *auþuz Proto-Germanic
- Öda Swedish
- aud Norwegian Nynorsk
- eaþe Old English
- essian Old English
- ēaþe, eaþe Old English
- īeþe Old English
- ethe Middle English
- unethe Middle English
- auð- Old Norse
- auðigr Old Norse
- auðr Old Norse
- mjúkr Old Norse
- ydmyg Danish
- ydmygelse Danish
- ydmyghed Danish
- øde Danish
- aisié Old French
- auður Icelandic
- odelijc Middle Dutch
- ootmoet Middle Dutch
- ōdi Old High German
- eyður Faroese
- öde Middle High German
- 𐌰𐌿𐌸𐌴𐌹𐍃 Gothic
- 𐌰𐌿𐌸𐌹𐌳𐌰 Gothic
- *auþī gmw-pro
- øþe, ø̄þe Old Swedish
- øþkn Old Swedish
- ø̄þe Old Swedish
- eith Scots
- øthmiuk, ødmygh, ydmygg Old Danish