plógur
Icelandic
/ˈpʰlouːʏr/
noun
Definitions
- plough
Etymology
Inherited from Old Norse plógr (plough) inherited from Proto-Germanic *plōgaz (plough, acquisition, operation).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*plōgaz
Gloss
plough, acquisition, operation
Concept
Semantic Field
Agriculture and vegetation
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- breastplough English
- overplough English
- plough English
- ploughability English
- ploughable English
- ploughbote English
- ploughboy English
- ploughest English
- plougheth English
- ploughhead English
- ploughhorse English
- ploughland English
- ploughlike English
- ploughman English
- ploughpan English
- ploughpoint English
- ploughshare English
- ploughstaff English
- ploughtail English
- ploughwise English
- ploughwoman English
- ploughzone English
- replough English
- snowplough English
- upplough English
- Pflug German
- Schneepflug German
- Schwellenpflug German
- plog Norwegian Bokmål
- *plōgaz Proto-Germanic
- plog Swedish
- プラウ Japanese
- plog Norwegian Nynorsk
- plog Old English
- plōh Old English
- plouh Middle English
- plógr Old Norse
- plov Danish
- *plugъ Proto-Slavic
- *pluog Old High German
- phluog Old High German
- Plou Luxembourgish, Letzeburgesch
- Schnéiplou Luxembourgish, Letzeburgesch
- *pluog Old Dutch
- plog Westrobothnian
- plūgas Lithuanian
- plōch Old Frisian
- plau Tok Pisin
- plogh Old Danish
- falaawaa Fiji Hindi