bouche
French
noun
Definitions
- mouth
Etymology
Inherited from Middle French bouche inherited from Old French boche (mouth) inherited from Latin bucca (cheek, mouth).
Origin
Latin
bucca
Gloss
cheek, mouth
Concept
Semantic Field
The body
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
口
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- amuse-bouche English
- bouche English
- bouchée English
- buccal English
- croquembouche English
- bukkaalinen Finnish
- *buccata Latin
- *buccula Latin
- *imbuccāre Latin
- *imbuccō Latin
- bucca Latin
- buccula Latin
- bucculentus Latin
- būca Latin
- bocca Italian
- amuse-bouche French
- amuser French
- arrière-bouche French
- bouchée French
- buccal French
- croque French
- croquembouche French
- croquer French
- emboucher French
- embouchure French
- en French
- fr French
- *bʰeHw- Proto-Indo-European
- bochecha Portuguese
- krokan Swedish
- boche Old French
- bochete Old French
- bouge Old French
- buŝa Esperanto
- buŝangulo Esperanto
- buŝo Esperanto
- buŝumo Esperanto
- boca Catalan, Valencian
- bucă Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- buged Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- boko Ido
- bòc Gaelic, Scottish Gaelic
- bouoche Norman
- bouche Middle French
- emboucher Middle French
- boca Old Portuguese
- bucigiar Old Portuguese
- bucã Aromanian
- boca Occitan
- boca Asturian
- bocje Friulian
- bocha Old Occitan
- bucca Sicilian
- buccularu Sicilian
- vucca Sicilian
- buca Dalmatian
- bouch Haitian, Haitian Creole
- *box Proto-Brythonic
- boke Walloon
- bôche Bourguignon
- vocca Neapolitan
- bucheîn Istriot
- bucun Istriot
- boca Aragonese
- bouch Antillean Creole