dal
Dutch (Brabantic)
/dɑl/
noun
Definitions
- valley
Etymology
Inherited from Middle Dutch dal inherited from Old Dutch dal inherited from Proto-Germanic *dalą (valley, dale).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*dalą
Gloss
valley, dale
Concept
Semantic Field
The physical world
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
谷, 溪
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Borrowdale English
- Calderdale English
- Clarksdale English
- Limedale English
- Lucedale English
- Ribblesdale English
- Riverdale English
- Swaledale English
- Tweeddale English
- Weardale English
- dale English
- daleside English
- dalesman English
- rundale English
- Bergtal German
- Jammertal German
- Lavanttal German
- Moseltal German
- Tal German
- Taler German
- Talnebel German
- Talsperre German
- Talweg German
- Todestal German
- Bloemendaal Dutch, Flemish
- Nijverdal Dutch, Flemish
- afdalen Dutch, Flemish
- bloem Dutch, Flemish
- dalen Dutch, Flemish
- daling Dutch, Flemish
- golf Dutch, Flemish
- golfdal Dutch, Flemish
- kloof Dutch, Flemish
- kloofdal Dutch, Flemish
- nederdalen Dutch, Flemish
- neerdalen Dutch, Flemish
- nijver Dutch, Flemish
- pok Dutch, Flemish
- pokdalig Dutch, Flemish
- rivier Dutch, Flemish
- rivierdal Dutch, Flemish
- traan Dutch, Flemish
- tranendal Dutch, Flemish
- *dʰol- Proto-Indo-European
- *daljō Proto-Germanic
- *dalą Proto-Germanic
- dæl Old English
- dale Middle English
- dalr Old Norse
- dæla Old Norse
- *dolъ Proto-Slavic
- dal Middle Dutch
- dalen Middle Dutch
- dālen Middle Dutch
- tal Old High German
- dal Afrikaans
- tal Middle High German
- Dall Luxembourgish, Letzeburgesch
- 𐌳𐌰𐌻𐌰𐌸 Gothic
- dal Old Dutch
- dal Old Saxon
- Tall Alemannic German
- долъ Church Slavic, Church Slavonic, Old Church Slavonic, Old Slavonic, Old Bulgarian
- *dal Old Frisian