koppur
Faroese
/ˈkʰɔʰpːʊɹ/
noun
Definitions
- cup
Etymology
Derived from Old Norse koppr derived from Latin cuppa (drinking vessel), cūpa (tub, cask, vat, tun) derived from Proto-Indo-European *keup- (arch, buckle, a hollow, bend).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*keup-
Gloss
arch, buckle, a hollow, bend
Concept
Semantic Field
The house
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- cuppa Latin
- cupula Latin
- cūpa Latin
- cūpula Latin
- kupa Hungarian
- coppa Italian
- cupo Italian
- κοῦπα Ancient Greek
- *keup- Proto-Indo-European
- *kewp- Proto-Indo-European
- kopp Norwegian Bokmål
- copo Portuguese
- *hufą Proto-Germanic
- *kuppaz Proto-Germanic
- kopp Norwegian Nynorsk
- copp Old English
- cuppe Old English
- koppr Old Norse
- kop Danish
- cope Old French
- cuve Old French
- copa Catalan, Valencian
- cupă Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- κούπα Greek (modern)
- cop Middle Dutch
- kopf Old High German
- coppán Old Irish
- eitur Faroese
- eiturkoppaslag Faroese
- eiturkoppur Faroese
- coupe Norman
- kopf Middle High German
- kupë Albanian
- copa Old Portuguese
- cuba Old Portuguese
- kop Middle Low German
- cupã Aromanian
- cope Friulian
- copa Old Spanish
- cuppinu Sicilian
- κούπα gkm
- copete Walloon
- kilemschkop Crimean Gothic
- cūpella ML