fillo
Old Portuguese
/ˈfi.ʎo/
noun
Definitions
- son
Etymology
Inherited from Latin fīlius (son) inherited from Old Latin fīlios (son) inherited from Proto-Indo-European *dʰeh₁y-li-os (sucker).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*dʰeh₁y-li-os
Gloss
sucker
Concept
Semantic Field
Agriculture and vegetation
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- file English
- filiolus Latin
- filius Latin
- filum Latin
- fīlia Latin
- fīliaster, filiaster, fīliastrum Latin
- fīliaster, fīliastrum Latin
- fīlios Latin
- fīlium Latin
- fīlius Latin
- fīlum Latin
- profilius Latin
- figlio Italian
- fil French
- hijo Spanish, Castilian
- *dʰeh₁y-li-os Proto-Indo-European
- filho Portuguese
- filhote Portuguese
- *flagilaz Proto-Germanic
- fil Old French
- fils Old French
- filo Esperanto
- fill Catalan, Valencian
- fillo Galician
- fiu Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- fieu Norman
- fis Norman
- fijan Albanian
- hilj Aromanian
- filh Occitan
- fiu Occitan
- fíu Asturian
- fi Friulian
- filh Old Occitan
- fijo Old Spanish
- figghiu Sicilian
- fìggio Ligurian
- felj Dalmatian
- ijo Ladino
- איז׳ו Ladino
- fidju Kabuverdianu
- feîo Istriot
- fīlios Old Latin
- fīlius Old Latin
- filio Interlingua
- fidju Guinea-Bissau Creole
- filho Mirandese
- fiu Picard
- فيليه Mozarabic
- fiľ Istro-Romanian
- 𐌚𐌉𐌋𐌄𐌏 Faliscan
- filh Indo-Portuguese