sœtr
Old Norse
adj
Definitions
- sweet
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Germanic *swōtuz (sweet) derived from Proto-Indo-European *sweh₂dus.
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*sweh₂dus
Gloss
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- *sweh₂dus Proto-Indo-European
- *swéh₂dus Proto-Indo-European
- sukkersøt Norwegian Bokmål
- søt Norwegian Bokmål
- søthet Norwegian Bokmål
- søtstoff Norwegian Bokmål
- *swōtuz Proto-Germanic
- söt Swedish
- sött Swedish
- sukkersøt Norwegian Nynorsk
- søt Norwegian Nynorsk
- søta Norwegian Nynorsk
- søte Norwegian Nynorsk
- søtleik Norwegian Nynorsk
- søtstoff Norwegian Nynorsk
- swetlice Old English
- swetnes Old English
- swote Old English
- swēte Old English
- sweete Middle English
- swete Middle English
- sœtleikr Old Norse
- forsøde Danish
- sød Danish
- sødladen Danish
- gómsætur Icelandic
- sætur Icelandic
- suozi Old High German
- swuozi Old High German
- søtur Faroese
- süeze Middle High German
- süezi Middle High German
- séiss Luxembourgish, Letzeburgesch
- *swōtī gmw-pro
- *suoti Old Dutch
- *swādus, *swādos Proto-Celtic
- swoti Old Saxon
- söter Old Swedish
- hällsøt Westrobothnian
- søt Westrobothnian
- swiet Western Frisian
- swēte Old Frisian
- swäit Saterland Frisian
- söß Central Franconian
- ziss Vilamovian