from
Middle English
preposition
Definitions
- from
Etymology
Derived from Old English from derived from Old Norse fram (onward, forward) derived from Proto-Germanic *fram (from, forward, away).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*fram
Gloss
from, forward, away
Concept
Semantic Field
Spatial relations
Ontological Category
Other
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- from English
- fromward English
- fromwards English
- hencefrom English
- herefrom English
- thencefrom English
- therefrom English
- whencefrom English
- wherefrom English
- *pr- Proto-Indo-European
- *pro- Proto-Indo-European
- *prom- Proto-Indo-European
- *promo- Proto-Indo-European
- fram Norwegian Bokmål
- *fram Proto-Germanic
- *promo- Proto-Germanic
- fram Swedish
- fram Norwegian Nynorsk
- fram Old English
- from Old English
- fram Old Norse
- framan Old Norse
- framr Old Norse
- frá Old Norse
- fram Icelandic
- fram Faroese
- 𐍆𐍂𐌰𐌼 Gothic
- fram Old Swedish
- framm Westrobothnian
- frammlänning Westrobothnian
- from Bislama
- fram Jamaican Creole