poeder
Dutch (Brabantic)
/ˈpu.dər/
noun
Definitions
- powder
Etymology
Inherited from Middle Dutch poeder derived from Old French poudre derived from Latin pulvis (dust, powder).
Origin
Latin
pulvis
Gloss
dust, powder
Concept
Semantic Field
The physical world
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- pillow English
- pulverine English
- pulvinone English
- *pulus Latin
- *pulvic(u)la Latin
- *pulvus Latin
- *pŭlverēta Latin
- pulverem Latin
- pulverulentus Latin
- pulvinus Latin
- pulvis Latin
- polve Italian
- polverino Italian
- baby Dutch, Flemish
- babypoeder Dutch, Flemish
- bakken Dutch, Flemish
- bakpoeder Dutch, Flemish
- brief Dutch, Flemish
- cacao Dutch, Flemish
- cacaopoeder Dutch, Flemish
- kerrie Dutch, Flemish
- kerriepoeder Dutch, Flemish
- koffie Dutch, Flemish
- koffiepoeder Dutch, Flemish
- melk Dutch, Flemish
- melkpoeder Dutch, Flemish
- poederbrief Dutch, Flemish
- poedersuiker Dutch, Flemish
- suiker Dutch, Flemish
- waspoeder Dutch, Flemish
- wassen Dutch, Flemish
- poudre French
- polvorón Spanish, Castilian
- polvos Spanish, Castilian
- *pel- Proto-Indo-European
- pouder Middle English
- poudre Middle English
- powder Middle English
- poudre Old French
- spulbera Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- poeder Middle Dutch
- spulbir Aromanian
- poudre xno
- pulvro Dalmatian
- pólvra Emilian