Bach
Plautdietsch
/baɦ/
noun
Definitions
- stream, creek, brook
Etymology
Inherited from Middle Low German bach inherited from Old Saxon *bak inherited from *baki (brook, beach).
Origin
*baki
Gloss
brook, beach
Concept
Semantic Field
The physical world
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
浜
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Bach English
- Cocoa Beach English
- Mexico Beach English
- Miami Beach English
- Panama City Beach English
- backbeach English
- beach English
- beach-goer English
- beachball English
- beachberry English
- beachbound English
- beachboy English
- beachcam English
- beachcast English
- beachcomber English
- beachcombing English
- beached English
- beachfront English
- beachful English
- beachgirl English
- beachgoer English
- beachgoing English
- beachgrass English
- beachhouse English
- beachie English
- beachkeeper English
- beachless English
- beachlike English
- beachline English
- beachsalmon English
- beachscape English
- beachside English
- beachward English
- beachwards English
- beachwear English
- beachwort English
- beachy English
- forebeach English
- nonbeach English
- palaeobeach English
- paleobeach English
- rebeach English
- seabeach English
- unbeach English
- biitsi Finnish
- Auerbach German
- Bach German
- Bachchor German
- Bacher German
- Bachforelle German
- Bachstelze German
- Beachparty German
- beek Dutch, Flemish
- beekjuffer Dutch, Flemish
- beach French
- Bach Portuguese
- *bakiz Proto-Germanic
- bäck Swedish
- バッハ Japanese
- ビーチ Japanese
- beċe, bæċe Old English
- bache, bæcche Middle English
- Bach Danish
- bēke Middle Dutch
- bah Old High German
- BWV Translingual
- beek Afrikaans
- bach Middle High German
- *baki gmw-pro
- bach Middle Low German
- *bak Old Saxon
- beki Old Saxon
- bækker Old Swedish
- ibhishi Zulu