tak
Dutch (Brabantic)
/tɑk/
noun
Definitions
- branch, twig, bough
- branch, offshoot
Etymology
Inherited from Middle Dutch tac (forked object, pointy object) inherited from Old Dutch *takko (pointy object) inherited from Frankish *takkō inherited from Proto-Germanic *takkô (spike, prickle, jag, point, twig, prong, protrusion, tine, tip, thorn).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*takkô
Gloss
spike, prickle, jag, point, twig, prong, protrusion, tine, tip, thorn
Concept
Semantic Field
Agriculture and vegetation
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- bartack English
- detack English
- retack English
- tack English
- tackboard English
- tacker English
- tacket English
- tackify English
- tackless English
- tacksman English
- tacky English
- thumbtack English
- tintack English
- untack English
- Zacke German
- zackenförmig German
- tacca Italian
- Pasen Dutch, Flemish
- graf Dutch, Flemish
- graftak Dutch, Flemish
- paastak Dutch, Flemish
- takkewijf Dutch, Flemish
- wijf Dutch, Flemish
- zij Dutch, Flemish
- zijtak Dutch, Flemish
- *dHgʰn- Proto-Indo-European
- *takkô Proto-Germanic
- tak Middle English
- caka Serbo-Croatian
- tacón Galician
- tac Middle Dutch
- *zacho Old High German
- dakša Latvian
- dakšiņa Latvian
- tak Afrikaans
- taca Gaelic, Scottish Gaelic
- zacke Middle High German
- Zack Luxembourgish, Letzeburgesch
- *takko Old Dutch
- *takkō Frankish
- earmtakke Western Frisian
- takke Western Frisian
- Zacke Pennsylvania German
- taque ONF.