οἶμος
Ancient Greek
noun
Definitions
- way, road, path
- stripe; strip of land
- (metaphorical) the course or strain of a song
Etymology
Derived from Proto-Indo-European *weyh₁- (chase, pursue, suppress, persecute, crave, hunt, reach towards, seek).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*weyh₁-
Gloss
chase, pursue, suppress, persecute, crave, hunt, reach towards, seek
Concept
Semantic Field
Motion
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- prooemion English
- via English
- viatecture English
- vaino Finnish
- Vienna Latin
- avius Latin
- devius Latin
- inviāre Latin
- obvio Latin
- obvius Latin
- prooemium Latin
- quadrivium Latin
- trivium Latin
- venor Latin
- via Latin
- viarius Latin
- viaticus Latin
- vim Latin
- vindex Latin
- vindico Latin
- vindicātus Latin
- vindicō, vindicāre Latin
- vis Latin
- via Italian
- voyou French
- Архара Russian
- vía Spanish, Castilian
- προοίμιον Ancient Greek
- ἴφιος Ancient Greek
- *-ós Proto-Indo-European
- *dwóh₁ Proto-Indo-European
- *weh₁y- Proto-Indo-European
- *wenh₁- Proto-Indo-European
- *weydʰ- Proto-Indo-European
- *weyh₁- Proto-Indo-European
- *weǵʰ- Proto-Indo-European
- *wiHrós, wih₁rós Proto-Indo-European
- *woyh₁-éh₂-ti Proto-Indo-European
- *wéyh₁s Proto-Indo-European
- via Norwegian Bokmål
- *waiþō Proto-Germanic
- via Norwegian Nynorsk
- *stъrviti Proto-Slavic
- *vojinъ Proto-Slavic
- vertu Old French
- voie Old French
- via Catalan, Valencian
- beque Galician
- via Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- geweide Middle High German
- stërvis Albanian
- vijë Albanian
- via Old Portuguese
- *wijā Proto-Italic
- veia Romansh
- via Romansh
- veîa Istriot