col
French
noun
Definitions
- collar
- col
- neck (now especially of objects, vases etc.)
Etymology
Inherited from Old French col inherited from Latin collum (neck, stem, throat).
Origin
Latin
collum
Gloss
neck, stem, throat
Concept
Semantic Field
The body
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
喉, 咽
Emoji
🦒 🧣
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- col English
- collum English
- angusticollis Latin
- brevicollis Latin
- carinicollis Latin
- collum Latin
- cribricollis Latin
- cylindricollis Latin
- decollo Latin
- denticollis Latin
- fuscicollis Latin
- impressicollis Latin
- laticollis Latin
- levicollis Latin
- longicollis Latin
- maculicollis Latin
- nigricollis Latin
- nitidicollis Latin
- puncticollis Latin
- rotundicollis Latin
- ruficollis Latin
- rugicollis Latin
- sulcicollis Latin
- vitticollis Latin
- cache-col Italian
- collo Italian
- col Dutch, Flemish
- cache-col French
- cacher French
- collet French
- colletin French
- décolletage French
- décolleter French
- torcol French
- tord French
- degollar Spanish, Castilian
- *kwol-o- Proto-Indo-European
- *kʷel- Proto-Indo-European
- *kʷolso- Proto-Indo-European
- *kʷolsom Proto-Indo-European
- cachecol Portuguese
- colete Portuguese
- degolar Portuguese
- col Old French
- colee Old French
- pentacol Old French
- kolo Esperanto
- coll Catalan, Valencian
- degollar Catalan, Valencian
- collet Norman
- colyi Norman
- ko Norman
- col Middle French
- colo Old Portuguese
- còl Occitan
- còu Occitan
- cuel Friulian
- cuello Old Spanish
- coddu Sicilian
- coło Venetian
- cual Dalmatian
- cuollo Neapolitan
- collare LL
- collāre LL