sombre
Norman
adj
Definitions
- (Jersey) sombre, dark
Etymology
Inherited from Old French sombre inherited from Latin *subumbrāre, sub (under, up from below, below, down).
Origin
Latin
sub
Gloss
under, up from below, below, down
Concept
Semantic Field
Spatial relations
Ontological Category
Other
Kanji
下
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- sub- English
- *sublungum Latin
- *subsuperāre Latin
- *subumbrāre Latin
- *subīliō Latin
- sub Latin
- sub- Latin
- subdolus Latin
- subter Latin
- subterrāre, *subterrō Latin
- subterrāre, subterrō Latin
- subāla Latin
- succortex Latin
- suffrutex Latin
- umbra Latin
- sub- German
- szub- Hungarian
- sombre French
- so Spanish, Castilian
- sombra Spanish, Castilian
- sonegar Portuguese
- sombre Old French
- sus- Old French
- sub Esperanto
- sub- Catalan, Valencian
- sub- Galician
- sub- Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- sufruncea Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- so Old Portuguese
- sob Old Portuguese
- soombrar Old Portuguese
- soonbra Old Portuguese
- sufrãmtseauã Aromanian
- *supo Proto-Italic
- so Asturian
- solombra Old Spanish
- sombreja Dalmatian