båt
Westrobothnian
/boːt/
noun
Definitions
- a boat
Etymology
Inherited from Old Norse bátr derived from Old English bāt (boat, vessel, food, that which can be bitten, bait, ship) derived from Proto-Germanic *baitaz derived from Proto-Indo-European *bʰeyd- (split, break, cleave, separate, chop, break down).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*bʰeyd-
Gloss
split, break, cleave, separate, chop, break down
Concept
Semantic Field
Basic actions and technology
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Emoji
🪓
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- bit English
- bitter English
- boatswain English
- fissile English
- fibra Latin
- findere, findō Latin
- fissio Latin
- fissiōnem Latin
- fissura Latin
- fistula Latin
- bisschen German
- fessacchiotto Italian
- beetje Dutch, Flemish
- bijten Dutch, Flemish
- bit Dutch, Flemish
- *bʰeyd- Proto-Indo-European
- *bʰinédti Proto-Indo-European
- *bʰéydt Proto-Indo-European
- *dʰeygʷ- Proto-Indo-European
- båt Norwegian Bokmål
- *baitaz Proto-Germanic
- *baitidaz Proto-Germanic
- *baitijaną Proto-Germanic
- *baitislą Proto-Germanic
- *baitō Proto-Germanic
- *bitiz Proto-Germanic
- *bitraz Proto-Germanic
- *bitô Proto-Germanic
- *bitą Proto-Germanic
- *bītaną Proto-Germanic
- båt Swedish
- bit Norwegian Nynorsk
- båt Norwegian Nynorsk
- bat Old English
- batweard Old English
- bāt Old English
- भेद Sanskrit
- bot Middle English
- beizla Old Norse
- bita Old Norse
- biti Old Norse
- bitill Old Norse
- bitlaðr Old Norse
- bitr Old Norse
- bitull Old Norse
- bátr Old Norse
- bat Old French
- batel Old French
- boato Esperanto
- bátur Icelandic
- bad Welsh
- bīzan Old High German
- bátur Faroese
- bitter Middle Low German
- *findō Proto-Italic
- bát Middle Irish
- bojin Marshallese
- *beid-ska Proto-Albanian
- baat Old Danish
- Buat North Frisian
- båt Elfdalian