sráit
Old Irish
/sraːdʲ/
noun
Definitions
- street, road, path, way
Etymology
Borrowed from Old Norse stræti (street) borrowed from Old English strǣt (a street, high road, a road, a town-road, a paved road, road) derived from *strātu (street) derived from Latin strāta (paved road, a paved road).
Origin
Latin
strāta
Gloss
paved road, a paved road
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- (via) strāta Latin
- (via) strāta, strāta Latin
- strāta Latin
- strātus Latin
- strada Italian
- straat Dutch, Flemish
- *sterh₃- Proto-Indo-European
- lagustræt Old English
- stræt Old English
- strǣt Old English
- streete Middle English
- strete Middle English
- caolsráid Irish
- cúlsráid Irish
- mórshráid Irish
- sráid Irish
- sráidbhaile Irish
- sráideacht Irish
- taobhshráid Irish
- stræti Old Norse
- stræde Danish
- strato Esperanto
- stræti Icelandic
- strāza Old High German
- frith-shràid Gaelic, Scottish Gaelic
- sràid Gaelic, Scottish Gaelic
- stræti Faroese
- ard-straid Manx
- fo-hraid Manx
- straid Manx
- *strātu gmw-pro
- strata Old Dutch
- strāta Old Dutch
- estrada Old Portuguese
- strata Old Saxon
- strāta Old Saxon
- straa Occitan
- sträät Westrobothnian
- strada Romansh
- strade Friulian
- estrada Old Occitan
- strete Old Frisian
- strēte Old Frisian
- estrada Old Spanish
- strata Sicilian
- ܐܣܛܪܛ Classical Syriac
- strade Tarantino