mynich
Vilamovian
noun
Definitions
- monk
Etymology
Inherited from Middle High German münich inherited from Old High German munih derived from Latin monicus, monachus (monk) derived from Ancient Greek μοναχός (solitary, single, monk, hermit, isolated, originally solitary, i, lonely).
Origin
Ancient Greek
μοναχός
Gloss
solitary, single, monk, hermit, isolated, originally solitary, i, lonely
Concept
Semantic Field
Kinship
Ontological Category
Other
Kanji
私, 僕, 俺
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- *monicus Latin
- monacha Latin
- monachus Latin
- monicus Latin
- monāchus Latin
- Mönch German
- Mönchin German
- Mönchsgeier German
- mönchisch German
- monaco Italian
- монах Russian
- monaguillo Spanish, Castilian
- monja Spanish, Castilian
- monje Spanish, Castilian
- μοναχός Ancient Greek
- *men- Proto-Indo-European
- *munikinnō Proto-Germanic
- munuc Old English
- moingne Old French
- monaĥo Esperanto
- μοναχός Greek (modern)
- mynach Welsh
- munih Old High German
- manach Old Irish
- монах Bulgarian
- münech Middle High German
- münich Middle High German
- *monik Old Dutch
- монах Macedonian
- mních Slovak
- mmonaki Swahili
- menih Slovene
- мънихъ Church Slavic, Church Slavonic, Old Church Slavonic, Old Slavonic, Old Bulgarian
- monge Old Occitan
- monachus LL