cos
Irish (Donegal)
/kɔsˠ/, /kʌsˠ/
noun
Definitions
- foot
- leg
Etymology
Inherited from Old Irish cos (leg) inherited from Proto-Celtic *koxsā inherited from Proto-Indo-European *koḱs- (joint).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*koḱs-
Gloss
joint
Concept
Semantic Field
The body
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
節
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- coxa English
- coxalgy English
- *coxinum Latin
- *coxīnum Latin
- *coxīnus Latin
- coxa Latin
- coxalis Latin
- coxo Latin
- culcita Latin
- cōxus Latin
- thigh, coxa Latin
- coscia Italian
- *koḱs- Proto-Indo-European
- *koḱs-eh₂ Proto-Indo-European
- coiscéim Irish
- coisí Irish
- cosán Irish
- crágchos Irish
- céim Irish
- gearrchosach Irish
- coxarius Old Norse
- cuisse Old French
- cuixa Catalan, Valencian
- coxa Galician
- coapsă Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- coes Welsh
- cos Old Irish
- cas Gaelic, Scottish Gaelic
- cass Manx
- kofshë Albanian
- coixa Old Portuguese
- *koxsā Proto-Celtic
- *káćšas Proto-Indo-Iranian
- coapsã Aromanian
- cuesse Friulian
- casán Middle Irish
- coscia Sicilian
- cuscinu Sicilian
- copsa Dalmatian
- *koɨs Proto-Brythonic
- cosa Istriot
- coscia Corsican
- cuixa Aragonese