Pieter
Dutch (Brabantic)
/ˈpi.tər/
proper noun
Etymology
Inherited from Middle Dutch Pieter derived from Latin Petrus (Peter) derived from Ancient Greek Πέτρος derived from Aramaic כֵּיפָא (rock, Peter, stone, Cephas).
Origin
Aramaic
כֵּיפָא
Gloss
rock, Peter, stone, Cephas
Concept
Semantic Field
The physical world
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
岩, 巌
Emoji
👨🎤 👩🎤 🤘 🥌 🧑🎤
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Petry English
- Pekka Finnish
- Pekko Finnish
- Petropolis Latin
- Petrus Latin
- Peter German
- Piero Italian
- Pietro Italian
- man Dutch, Flemish
- pieterman Dutch, Flemish
- Pierre French
- Питер Russian
- Пётр Russian
- Pedro Spanish, Castilian
- Πέτρος Ancient Greek
- Pedro Portuguese
- Per Swedish
- Petrus Old English
- Petre Middle English
- Pétr Old Norse
- Per Danish
- بطرس Arabic
- Pere Catalan, Valencian
- Πέτρος Greek (modern)
- Pedr Welsh
- Peter Middle Dutch
- Petrus Middle Dutch
- Pieter Middle Dutch
- Pēteris Latvian
- Petur Old Irish
- Pieter Afrikaans
- Петър Bulgarian
- 𐍀𐌰𐌹𐍄𐍂𐌿𐍃 Gothic
- Pedro Old Portuguese
- Pèire Occitan
- 베드로 Korean
- Пятро Belarusian
- Pedru Asturian
- Pieri Friulian
- Petras Lithuanian
- Per Breton
- כֵּיפָא Aramaic
- Per Norwegian