maðkr
Old Norse
noun
Definitions
- maggot, grub, worm
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Germanic *maþô (worm, maggot).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*maþô
Gloss
worm, maggot
Concept
Semantic Field
Animals
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- mawk English
- Made German
- Madenhacker German
- Madenkäse German
- Madenschraube German
- Madenwurm German
- *mat- Proto-Indo-European
- *math- Proto-Indo-European
- *mot- Proto-Indo-European
- beitemark Norwegian Bokmål
- mark Norwegian Bokmål
- rismark Norwegian Bokmål
- slagmark Norwegian Bokmål
- villmark Norwegian Bokmål
- våtmark Norwegian Bokmål
- ødemark Norwegian Bokmål
- *maþukaz Proto-Germanic
- *maþô Proto-Germanic
- mask Swedish
- austmarkmus Norwegian Nynorsk
- beitemark Norwegian Nynorsk
- fjellmarkmus Norwegian Nynorsk
- mark Norwegian Nynorsk
- markmus Norwegian Nynorsk
- misjonsmark Norwegian Nynorsk
- rismark Norwegian Nynorsk
- slagmark Norwegian Nynorsk
- villmark Norwegian Nynorsk
- våtmark Norwegian Nynorsk
- maþa Old English
- maþu Old English
- maddok Middle English
- magot Middle English
- mawk Middle English
- fullr Old Norse
- maðkfullr Old Norse
- maddike Danish
- maðkur Icelandic
- mado Old High German
- maðkur Faroese
- 𐌼𐌰𐌸𐌰 Gothic
- *matho Old Dutch
- maþker Old Swedish
- mark Westrobothnian
- mathk Old Danish
- maðk Scanian