sekkr
Old Norse
noun
Definitions
- sack, big bag (for potatoes, flour, mail, etc.)
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Germanic *sakkuz (sack) derived from Latin saccus (large bag, sack, bag, purse, a sack) derived from Ancient Greek σάκκος (sack, sackcloth, bag, bag of coarse cloth).
Origin
Ancient Greek
σάκκος
Gloss
sack, sackcloth, bag, bag of coarse cloth
Concept
Semantic Field
Basic actions and technology
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
袋
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- sacciferous English
- saccus English
- säkki Finnish
- bisaccium Latin
- saccarius Latin
- sacceus Latin
- saccus Latin
- Sack German
- sacco Italian
- saccoccia Italian
- sac French
- saco Spanish, Castilian
- σάκκινος Ancient Greek
- σάκκος Ancient Greek
- σακκοπήρα Ancient Greek
- σακχυφάντης Ancient Greek
- ῥυτίς Ancient Greek
- magesekk Norwegian Bokmål
- ryggsekk Norwegian Bokmål
- sandsekk Norwegian Bokmål
- sekk Norwegian Bokmål
- sekkepipe Norwegian Bokmål
- skolesekk Norwegian Bokmål
- søppelsekk Norwegian Bokmål
- *sakkuz Proto-Germanic
- matsäck Swedish
- ryggsäck Swedish
- säck Swedish
- säcklöpning Swedish
- magesekk Norwegian Nynorsk
- ryggsekk Norwegian Nynorsk
- sandsekk Norwegian Nynorsk
- sekk Norwegian Nynorsk
- sekkepipe Norwegian Nynorsk
- søppelsekk Norwegian Nynorsk
- sacc Old English
- sac Old French
- sako Esperanto
- sekkjapípa Icelandic
- sekkur Icelandic
- sac Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- σάκος Greek (modern)
- sach Welsh
- ryggsekkur Faroese
- sekkur Faroese
- 𐍃𐌰𐌺𐌺𐌿𐍃 Gothic
- *sakku gmw-pro
- sac Old Dutch
- saco Old Portuguese
- sac Aromanian
- sac Friulian
- saco Old Spanish
- sac'h Breton
- sagh Cornish
- sacco Neapolitan