draga
Icelandic
/ˈtraːɣa/
verb-strong
Definitions
- to draw, drag, pull
Etymology
Inherited from Old Norse draga (draw, attract) inherited from Proto-Germanic *draganą (draw, drag, pull, carry) derived from Proto-Indo-European *dʰreǵ- (pull, drag, draw, scratch, draw with one's mouth).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*dʰreǵ-
Gloss
pull, drag, draw, scratch, draw with one's mouth
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
- antidrag English
- drag English
- drag artist English
- drag-chain English
- dragbar English
- dragbox English
- dragfooted English
- draggability English
- draggable English
- dragger English
- draggest English
- draggeth English
- draggle English
- draggy English
- draghound English
- dragless English
- draglift English
- dragline English
- draglink English
- dragman English
- dragnet English
- dragsman English
- dragster English
- dragstrip English
- microdrag English
- outdrag English
- redrag English
- underdrag English
- updrag English
- драга Russian
- *dʰregʰ- Proto-Indo-European
- *dʰreǵ- Proto-Indo-European
- *dʰreǵʰ- Proto-Indo-European
- *dʰréǵ-e-ti Proto-Indo-European
- dra Norwegian Bokmål
- *dragandz Proto-Germanic
- *draganą Proto-Germanic
- *drinkaną Proto-Germanic
- ドラァグ Japanese
- dra Norwegian Nynorsk
- draga Norwegian Nynorsk
- drage Norwegian Nynorsk
- dragan Old English
- draggen Middle English
- draga Old Norse
- dragast Old Norse
- *dragan Old High German
- tragan Old High German
- draga Faroese
- androen Luxembourgish, Letzeburgesch
- ausdroen Luxembourgish, Letzeburgesch
- bäidroen Luxembourgish, Letzeburgesch
- droen Luxembourgish, Letzeburgesch
- verdroen Luxembourgish, Letzeburgesch
- zoudroen Luxembourgish, Letzeburgesch
- 𐌳𐍂𐌰𐌲𐌰𐌽 Gothic
- dragan Old Dutch
- dragan Old Saxon
- dragha Old Swedish
- draga Westrobothnian
- draga Old Frisian
- drega Old Frisian
- dräga Gutnish