schaken
Low German
verb
Definitions
- to move, shift
- to push, shake
Etymology
Inherited from Old Saxon skakan inherited from Proto-Germanic *skakaną (shake, swing, stir, escape) derived from Proto-Indo-European *(s)keg- (stir, shake).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*(s)keg-
Gloss
stir, shake
Concept
Semantic Field
Food and drink
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Shaker English
- antishake English
- ashake English
- atshake English
- beshake English
- footshake English
- forshake English
- handshake English
- headshake English
- milkshake English
- overshake English
- protein shake English
- reshake English
- shackle English
- shakable English
- shake English
- shakeable English
- shakefork English
- shakehole English
- shakemap English
- shakeout English
- shaker English
- shakerag English
- shakest English
- shaketh English
- shakeup English
- shakeworthy English
- shaky English
- thickshake English
- toshake English
- unshakable English
- unshake English
- unshakeable English
- windshake English
- schaak Dutch, Flemish
- schaakster Dutch, Flemish
- schaakstuk Dutch, Flemish
- schaken Dutch, Flemish
- schaker Dutch, Flemish
- *(s)kAg'- Proto-Indo-European
- *(s)keg- Proto-Indo-European
- *(s)kek- Proto-Indo-European
- *skakaną Proto-Germanic
- *skukkaną Proto-Germanic
- skaka Swedish
- skakis Swedish
- skakning Swedish
- scacan Old English
- sċeacan Old English
- schaken Middle English
- skaka Old Norse
- skaka Icelandic
- schâken Middle Dutch
- skakan Old Saxon
- skaka Old Swedish
- *skakkja Frankish