páskir
Faroese
/ˈpʰɔʃːɪɹ/
noun
Definitions
- Easter
Etymology
Derived from Old Norse páskar derived from Latin pascha (Easter, Passover) derived from Ancient Greek πάσχα (Passover) derived from Aramaic פסחא derived from Hebrew (modern) פֶּסַח (Passover).
Origin
Hebrew (Modern Ashkenazic)
פֶּסַח
Gloss
Passover
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Pesach English
- Paschae, paschae Latin
- pascha Latin
- pascha, Pascha Latin
- paschae Latin
- paschalis Latin
- pascua Latin
- Πάσχα Ancient Greek
- πάσχα Ancient Greek
- påske Norwegian Bokmål
- påsk Swedish
- påske Norwegian Nynorsk
- páskar Old Norse
- pasches Old French
- pasques Old French
- pasko Esperanto
- páskar Icelandic
- Πέσαχ Greek (modern)
- Paskah Indonesian
- Pasg Welsh
- paschen Middle Dutch
- Cásc Old Irish
- lilja Faroese
- páskalilja Faroese
- pāschen Middle High German
- pashkë Albanian
- פּאַסכע Yiddish
- פֶּסַח Hebrew (modern)
- פסח Hebrew (modern)
- פסחא Hebrew (modern)
- pāscha Old Saxon
- Pask Cornish
- pasquêta Ligurian
- פַּסְחָא Aramaic
- פסחא Aramaic
- πάσχα grc-koi
- פֶּסַח hbo
- pāskar Gutnish