wald
Old High German
[ˈwald]
noun
Definitions
- forest
Etymology
Inherited from *walþu inherited from Proto-Germanic *walþuz (forest).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*walþuz
Gloss
forest
Concept
Semantic Field
The physical world
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
森
Emoji
🐗 🐺 🦌
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Waldo English
- vole English
- Wald German
- *wel(ə)-t- Proto-Indo-European
- *wélnu- Proto-Indo-European
- *wólnus Proto-Indo-European
- voll Norwegian Bokmål
- *walþijō Proto-Germanic
- *walþuz Proto-Germanic
- voll Norwegian Nynorsk
- geweald Old English
- wald Old English
- weald Old English
- wald Middle English
- weeld Middle English
- wold Middle English
- vald Old Norse
- vǫllr Old Norse
- völlur Icelandic
- vøllur Faroese
- walt Middle High German
- וואַלד Yiddish
- *walþu gmw-pro
- walt Old Dutch
- balt Cimbrian
- wald Old Saxon
- wāld Old Saxon
- Wald Alemannic German
- uaul Romansh
- wald Old Frisian
- bòlt Mòcheno
- Wald Hunsrik
- 𒌑𒂊𒂖𒇻𒍑 Hittite