soccus
Latin
noun
Definitions
- slipper
- comedy
Etymology
Derived from Ancient Greek σύκχος (a kind of shoe).
Origin
Ancient Greek
σύκχος
Gloss
a kind of shoe
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Socke German
- balerinazokni Hungarian
- bokazokni Hungarian
- titokzokni Hungarian
- térdzokni Hungarian
- zokni Hungarian
- zokniban Hungarian
- zoknid Hungarian
- zoknija Hungarian
- zoknijai Hungarian
- zoknijaid Hungarian
- zoknijaik Hungarian
- zoknijaim Hungarian
- zoknijaink Hungarian
- zoknijaitok Hungarian
- zoknijuk Hungarian
- zoknik Hungarian
- zoknikat Hungarian
- zoknikon Hungarian
- zoknikra Hungarian
- zoknim Hungarian
- zoknin Hungarian
- zokninak Hungarian
- zoknink Hungarian
- zoknira Hungarian
- zoknitok Hungarian
- socco Italian
- sok Dutch, Flemish
- zueco Spanish, Castilian
- σύκχος Ancient Greek
- sokk Norwegian Bokmål
- *sukkaz Proto-Germanic
- socka Swedish
- sokk Norwegian Nynorsk
- socc Old English
- socke Middle English
- sokkr Old Norse
- sok Danish
- sokkur Icelandic
- zoca Galician
- zoco Galician
- zoqueiro Galician
- socke Middle Dutch
- soc Old High German
- sokkur Faroese
- *sukka Proto-Finnic
- socke Middle Low German
- sack Westrobothnian
- Sock Central Franconian
- sukā Livonian