abrigar
Portuguese
/ɐ.bɾi.ˈɡaɾ/
verb
Definitions
- (transitive) harbour provide refuge for
Etymology
Inherited from Old Portuguese abrigar inherited from Latin aprīcāre, aprīcārī (keep warm), abrigāre derived from Frankish *birīhan, *biwrīhan (protect, cover) derived from Proto-Germanic *bi- (be-, by, at, by-) derived from Proto-Indo-European *werḱ-.
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*werḱ-
Gloss
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- abrigāre Latin
- apricāre Latin
- aprīcāre Latin
- aprīcārī Latin
- abri French
- abrier French
- *glemb- Proto-Indo-European
- *h₁epi Proto-Indo-European
- *puH- Proto-Indo-European
- *sweyg- Proto-Indo-European
- *werk'- Proto-Indo-European
- *werḱ- Proto-Indo-European
- abrigado Portuguese
- *berganą Proto-Germanic
- *bi Proto-Germanic
- *bi- Proto-Germanic
- *wrangaz Proto-Germanic
- be- Old English
- beclyppan Old English
- befȳlan Old English
- begyrdan Old English
- beswīcan Old English
- betwēonan Old English
- bewyrċean Old English
- bīeġan Old English
- abrier Old French
- abrigar Galician
- bi- Old High German
- binnen Middle High German
- 𐌱𐌹- Gothic
- *binnan Old Dutch
- bi- Old Dutch
- abrigar Old Portuguese
- beroren Middle Low German
- binnen Middle Low German
- bi- Old Saxon
- *berīhan Frankish
- *berīhan, *berihan Frankish
- *birīhan, *biwrīhan Frankish
- protect, hide, *bergan, to take care of Frankish
- abriar Old Occitan
- binnen Western Frisian