oxygenium
Latin
noun
Definitions
- (New Latin) oxygen
Etymology
Derived from French oxygène (oxygen) derived from Ancient Greek ὀξύς (sharp, keen, pointed, swift, pointy, acidic).
Origin
Ancient Greek
ὀξύς
Gloss
sharp, keen, pointed, swift, pointy, acidic
Concept
Semantic Field
Sense perception
Ontological Category
Property
Kanji
鋭
Emoji
🪒
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- oxy- English
- oxygen English
- oxytocin English
- oxysporus Latin
- oxytropis Latin
- Oxygen German
- ossi- Italian
- zuurstof Dutch, Flemish
- antioxygène French
- oxygène French
- oxygénase French
- trioxygène French
- ὀξυλάπαθον Ancient Greek
- ὀξύβαφον Ancient Greek
- ὀξύγαλα Ancient Greek
- ὀξύγαρον Ancient Greek
- ὀξύμωρος Ancient Greek
- ὀξύρρυγχος Ancient Greek
- ὀξύς Ancient Greek
- ὀξύσχοινος Ancient Greek
- *h₂eḱ- Proto-Indo-European
- oxigénio Portuguese
- أكسجين Arabic
- oxiür Catalan, Valencian
- oxigen Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- oxycoccos Translingual
- oksijen Turkish
- oxi Vietnamese
- кислород Bulgarian
- oksigen Azerbaijani
- חמצן Hebrew (modern)
- кислород Macedonian
- soerstof Western Frisian
- ອົກຊີແຊນ Lao
- oksijèn Haitian, Haitian Creole
- oksigen Crimean Tatar