wond
Dutch (Brabantic)
/ʋɔnt/
noun
Definitions
- wound
Etymology
Inherited from Middle Dutch wonde inherited from Old Dutch wunda inherited from Proto-Germanic *wundō (wound, a wound).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*wundō
Gloss
wound, a wound
Concept
Semantic Field
The body
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
傷
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- airwound English
- bewound English
- forwound English
- headwound English
- intrawound English
- overwound English
- periwound English
- stabwound English
- underwound English
- wound English
- woundability English
- woundable English
- woundcare English
- wounder English
- woundest English
- woundeth English
- woundfin English
- woundless English
- woundlike English
- woundsome English
- woundwood English
- woundwort English
- Papierschnittwunde German
- Stichwunde German
- Wundauflage German
- Wundbrand German
- Wunde German
- Wundrand German
- verwunden German
- arts Dutch, Flemish
- boom Dutch, Flemish
- boomwond Dutch, Flemish
- brand Dutch, Flemish
- brandwond Dutch, Flemish
- schaafwond Dutch, Flemish
- schaven Dutch, Flemish
- vocht Dutch, Flemish
- wondarts Dutch, Flemish
- wondvocht Dutch, Flemish
- *h₂wen- Proto-Indo-European
- *wundō Proto-Germanic
- wund Old English
- wund Middle English
- wunden Middle English
- und Old Norse
- vundi Esperanto
- vundo Esperanto
- und Icelandic
- *wontartse Middle Dutch
- wonde Middle Dutch
- wonde, wunde Middle Dutch
- wunta Old High German
- wond Afrikaans
- wunde Middle High German
- 𐍅𐌿𐌽𐌳𐌿𐍆𐌽𐌹 Gothic
- wunda Old Dutch
- wunda Old Saxon
- wunde Old Frisian