coraxe
Galician
/koˈɾaʃe̝/
noun
Definitions
- courage, boldness, audacity
- rage
Etymology
Borrowed from Old Occitan coratge borrowed from Old French corage derived from Latin cor (heart, mind, soul).
Origin
Latin
cor
Gloss
heart, mind, soul
Concept
Semantic Field
The body
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
心
Emoji
❤️ 💌 💑 💒 💟 😻 🤍 🤎 🩺 🫀 😍 😻 🥰
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- anticor English
- cordiform English
- courage English
- *accordo, *accordō, accordāre Latin
- *accordāre Latin
- *coraticum Latin
- *corāta Latin
- *corāticum Latin
- *corātiō Latin
- *corātiō, *coratio, *corātiōne Latin
- concors Latin
- cor Latin
- cordatus Latin
- cordifolius Latin
- praecordia Latin
- recordor Latin
- socors Latin
- vecors Latin
- coraggio Italian
- cuore Italian
- cœur French
- coraje Spanish, Castilian
- cordial Spanish, Castilian
- cuerdo Spanish, Castilian
- *ḱḗr Proto-Indo-European
- coragem Portuguese
- corage Middle English
- elne Middle English
- corage Old French
- corageus Old French
- cuer Old French
- encoragier Old French
- koro Esperanto
- coratge Catalan, Valencian
- cord Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- couothage Norman
- kuoradj Norman
- tchoeu Norman
- tchoeur Norman
- corage Middle French
- cor Old Portuguese
- coraçon Old Portuguese
- coratge Occitan
- *kord Proto-Italic
- cor Romansh
- corazón Asturian
- cûr Friulian
- cor Old Occitan
- coratge Old Occitan
- coraçon Old Spanish
- cori Sicilian
- curaggiu Sicilian
- cor Venetian
- cheu Ligurian
- côr Bourguignon
- core Neapolitan
- cor Istriot
- core Istriot
- corazón Aragonese
- côr Franco-Provençal
- keur Picard
- tcheur Picard
- قُرَجّون Mozarabic
- côre Tarantino