chendre
Norman
noun
Definitions
- (Jersey) ash, cinder
Etymology
Inherited from Old French cendre inherited from Latin cinerem, cinis derived from Proto-Indo-European *ken- (ashes, dust, new, fresh, begin, pinch, scratch, press, cut, kink, buckle, arise, rub, bend, scrape).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*ken-
Gloss
ashes, dust, new, fresh, begin, pinch, scratch, press, cut, kink, buckle, arise, rub, bend, scrape
Concept
Semantic Field
The physical world
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
始
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- cinder English
- cinerem Latin
- cinerem, cinis Latin
- cinis Latin
- cinus Latin
- recens Latin
- Zinder German
- cendre French
- cendreux French
- cendrier French
- *ken- Proto-Indo-European
- *knewg- Proto-Indo-European
- *knog-, *kneg- Proto-Indo-European
- Céadaoin Irish
- aonchineálach Irish
- aonchineálacht Irish
- croschineálach Irish
- díchineálacht Irish
- ilchineálach Irish
- *konъ Proto-Slavic
- *konьcь Proto-Slavic
- *načędlo Proto-Slavic
- *načęti Proto-Slavic
- *začęti Proto-Slavic
- *čędo Proto-Slavic
- *ščenę Proto-Slavic
- cendre Old French
- cindro Esperanto
- cendra Catalan, Valencian
- bachgen Welsh
- kost Latvian
- cindro Ido
- *kanta Proto-Celtic
- *kenetlom Proto-Celtic
- *kentus Proto-Celtic
- *kanyáH Proto-Indo-Iranian
- *kaníHnas Proto-Indo-Iranian
- tschendra Romansh
- *kēnja Proto-Albanian
- *kanyáH Proto-Iranian
- cinde Walloon
- کیجا Mazanderani