sætt
Faroese
/saʰtː/
noun
Definitions
- a reconciliation
- a settlement
Etymology
Inherited from Old Norse sætt inherited from Proto-Germanic *sahtiz (reproach, reconciliation, agreement) derived from Proto-Indo-European *seh₂g- (seek out, seek, track, track down, investigate, trace).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*seh₂g-
Gloss
seek out, seek, track, track down, investigate, trace
Concept
Semantic Field
Cognition
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- ἡγέομαι Ancient Greek
- *h₁epi Proto-Indo-European
- *seh₂g- Proto-Indo-European
- *séh₂gyeti Proto-Indo-European
- *sahtiz Proto-Germanic
- *sakaną Proto-Germanic
- *sakō Proto-Germanic
- *sakōną Proto-Germanic
- *sōkijaną Proto-Germanic
- *sōkniz Proto-Germanic
- saht Old English
- seht Old English
- sakar Old Norse
- sakareyrir Old Norse
- sakeyrir Old Norse
- sakir Old Norse
- sakna Old Norse
- saknaðr Old Norse
- sekr Old Norse
- sátt Old Norse
- sætt Old Norse
- sǫknuðr Old Norse
- sætt Icelandic
- -ha Welsh
- jagōn Old High German
- condieig Old Irish
- con·dïeig Old Irish
- saichdetu Old Irish
- sátt Faroese
- 𐌲𐌰𐍃𐌰𐌷𐍄𐍃 Gothic
- *-sagyetor Proto-Celtic
- *kom- Proto-Celtic
- *sagyeti Proto-Celtic
- *texto- Proto-Celtic
- *uɸosaɡetis Proto-Celtic
- *śāgn- Proto-Albanian