sauvage
French
adj
Definitions
- wild, untamed
Etymology
Inherited from Old French sauvage inherited from Latin salvāticus, silvāticus (of the woods, literally, wild).
Origin
Latin
silvāticus
Gloss
of the woods, literally, wild
Concept
Semantic Field
Animals
Ontological Category
Property
Emoji
🐅 🐆 🐗 🐯 🐺 🦁
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- *salvāticus Latin
- salvaticus Latin
- salvāticus Latin
- silvāticus Latin
- inselvatichire Italian
- selvaticamente Italian
- selvatichezza Italian
- selvaticità Italian
- selvatico Italian
- selvaticume Italian
- semiselvatico Italian
- sauvagement French
- sauvageon French
- sauvagerie French
- sauvagesse French
- salvajes Spanish, Castilian
- selvático Spanish, Castilian
- サイバシ Japanese
- savage Middle English
- sauvage Old French
- savage Old French
- malsovaĝa Esperanto
- sovaĝa Esperanto
- sovaĝe Esperanto
- salvatge Catalan, Valencian
- salvatgement Catalan, Valencian
- salvatjada Catalan, Valencian
- sălbatic Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- sălbăticie Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- sălbăticiune Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- sauvage Norman
- salvatge Occitan
- salvadi Friulian
- salvatge Old Occitan
- sauvatge Old Occitan
- sovaz Mauritian Creole
- siwash Chinook Jargon
- siwash, siwosh Chinook Jargon