avo
Ido
noun
Definitions
- grandparent
Etymology
Borrowed from Esperanto avo (grandfather, grandparent) borrowed from Italian avo (ancestor) borrowed from Spanish, Castilian abuelo borrowed from French aïeul (grandfather) derived from Latin avus (grandfather, ancestor, old man) derived from Proto-Indo-European *h₂ewh₂yos (grandfather).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*h₂ewh₂yos
Gloss
grandfather
Concept
Semantic Field
Kinship
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
爺
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- avital English
- *aviolus Latin
- *avoilu- Latin
- avitus Latin
- avunculus Latin
- avus Latin
- proavus Latin
- tris Latin
- tritavus Latin
- avo Italian
- bisavo Italian
- aïeul French
- bisaïeul French
- trisaïeul French
- abolengo Spanish, Castilian
- abuelastro Spanish, Castilian
- abuelito Spanish, Castilian
- abuelo Spanish, Castilian
- bisabuelo Spanish, Castilian
- *h₂ewh₂yos Proto-Indo-European
- *h₂éwh₂os Proto-Indo-European
- *ujь Proto-Slavic
- aiol Old French
- Avo Frosto Esperanto
- ave Esperanto
- avino Esperanto
- avo Esperanto
- avoĉjo Esperanto
- avĉjo Esperanto
- praavino Esperanto
- praavo Esperanto
- avi Catalan, Valencian
- auș Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- Nimravidae Translingual
- avino Ido
- avulo Ido
- lolo Tagalog
- *awyos Proto-Celtic
- aush Aromanian
- von Friulian
- welo Papiamentu
- lolo Bikol Central
- abuelo Hiligaynon