corne
Middle English
/kɔrn/
noun
Definitions
- (rare) callus
Etymology
Borrowed from Old French corne (corner, projecting point, angle, a horn) derived from Latin cornū (horn, a trumpet, a horn, a bugle-horn).
Origin
Latin
cornū
Gloss
horn, a trumpet, a horn, a bugle-horn
Concept
Semantic Field
The body
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
角
Emoji
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Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- -corn English
- bicorn English
- cornage English
- cornet English
- cornett English
- cornific English
- cornification English
- cornuate English
- *corna Latin
- Bicorniger Latin
- bicorniger Latin
- bicornis Latin
- cornesco Latin
- cornicen Latin
- cornifer Latin
- corniger Latin
- cornua Latin
- cornuatus Latin
- cornū Latin
- reciprocicornis Latin
- tricorniger Latin
- unicornis Latin
- cornetto Italian
- corno Italian
- corne French
- cuerno Spanish, Castilian
- *ḱerh₂- Proto-Indo-European
- corno Portuguese
- cornet Middle English
- corn Old French
- corne Old French
- cornet Old French
- corn Catalan, Valencian
- corn Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- corn Welsh
- corn Old Irish
- cône Norman
- cuernu Asturian
- cuar Friulian
- cornere xno
- coine Walloon
- cuorno Istriot
- cuerno Aragonese
- cornetto Interlingua