fol
Galician
/ˈfɔl/
noun
Definitions
- bag (of bagpipes)
- bellows
- bag, sack, goatskin
- (archaic) a madman
Etymology
Inherited from Latin follis (bellows, purse, sack, inflated ball, belly, leather bag, paunch, a bag, device, bellows q) derived from Old Occitan fol derived from Old French fol (insane, mad, foolish, silly).
Origin
Old French
fol
Gloss
insane, mad, foolish, silly
Concept
Semantic Field
Cognition
Ontological Category
Property
Emoji
💢 🗯️ 😠 😡
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- follis English
- *exfollāre Latin
- *follinus Latin
- *fullāre Latin
- *infolliō Latin
- follicāre Latin
- follis Latin
- follis, follem Latin
- fullāre Latin
- follar Spanish, Castilian
- follón Spanish, Castilian
- fuelle Spanish, Castilian
- φόλλις Ancient Greek
- *bʰelǵʰ- Proto-Indo-European
- *bʰolǵʰnis Proto-Indo-European
- fole Portuguese
- ffoole Middle English
- fole Middle English
- fool Middle English
- foole Middle English
- foul Middle English
- fjols Danish
- fol Old French
- fol hardi Old French
- folaige Old French
- foll Catalan, Valencian
- esfolar Galician
- sufleca Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- înfoia Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- fo Norman
- fol Middle French
- esfolar Old Portuguese
- Folle Alemannic German
- fol Old Occitan
- fô Bourguignon