kredo
Indonesian
/ˈkre.do/
noun
Definitions
- creed, credo.
Etymology
Borrowed from Dutch, Flemish credo (creed) derived from Middle Dutch crede derived from Latin credo, crēdō derived from Proto-Italic *krezdō derived from Proto-Indo-European *ḱred dʰeh₁-, *ḱréddʰh₁eti (place one's heart, believe, i.e. to trust, i.e, trust).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*ḱred dʰeh₁-, *ḱréddʰh₁eti
Gloss
place one's heart, believe, i.e. to trust, i.e, trust
Concept
Semantic Field
Cognition
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- anticor English
- cordiform 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
- credo Latin
- credo, crēdō Latin
- crēdere Latin
- crēdō Latin
- praecordia Latin
- recordor Latin
- socors Latin
- vecors Latin
- cuore Italian
- credo Dutch, Flemish
- cœur French
- cordial Spanish, Castilian
- cuerdo Spanish, Castilian
- *ḱerd- Proto-Indo-European
- *ḱred dʰeh₁- Proto-Indo-European
- *ḱred dʰeh₁-, *ḱréddʰh₁eti Proto-Indo-European
- *ḱḗr Proto-Indo-European
- श्रद्दधाति Sanskrit
- elne Middle English
- corage Old French
- corageus Old French
- cuer Old French
- koro Esperanto
- cord Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- crede Middle Dutch
- tchoeu Norman
- tchoeur Norman
- cor Old Portuguese
- coraçon Old Portuguese
- *kreddīti Proto-Celtic
- *kord Proto-Italic
- *krezdō Proto-Italic
- cor Romansh
- corazón Asturian
- cûr Friulian
- cor Old Occitan
- coratge Old Occitan
- coraçon Old Spanish
- cori 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