Eed
Luxemburgeois
/eːt/
noun
Definitions
- oath
Etymology
Inherited from Old High German eid inherited from Proto-Germanic *aiþaz (oath).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*aiþaz
Gloss
oath
Concept
Semantic Field
Law
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- oath English
- oath-ring English
- oathable English
- oathbound English
- oathbreach English
- oathbreaker English
- oathbreaking English
- oathless English
- oathlet English
- oathlike English
- oathtaking English
- Amtseid German
- Eid German
- Eidbrecher German
- Eidbruch German
- Eidesformel German
- Eidgenosse German
- Eidgenossenschaft German
- Offenbarungseid German
- beeidigen German
- ambtseed Dutch, Flemish
- eed Dutch, Flemish
- eedgespan Dutch, Flemish
- zuiveringseed Dutch, Flemish
- *h₁óytos Proto-Indo-European
- *oyt- Proto-Indo-European
- *aiþaz Proto-Germanic
- *ganautaz Proto-Germanic
- aþ Old English
- āþ Old English
- ooth Middle English
- eiðr Old Norse
- ed Danish
- eiður Icelandic
- eet Middle Dutch
- eid Old High German
- eed Afrikaans
- eit Middle High German
- 𐌰𐌹𐌸𐍃 Gothic
- *aiþ gmw-pro
- *ēth Old Dutch
- eth Old Saxon
- ēth Old Saxon
- Eidgenoss Alemannic German
- ēth Old Frisian
- ēþ, eth Old Danish