lever
Danish
[ˈlewˀɐ], [ˈleːʋɐ], [leˈʋeɐ̯ˀ]
noun
Definitions
- liver
Etymology
Inherited from Old Danish liuær inherited from Old Norse lifr (liver) inherited from Proto-Germanic *librō (liver).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*librō
Gloss
liver
Concept
Semantic Field
The body
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
肝
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- antiliver English
- hemiliver English
- leverpostej English
- liver English
- livered English
- livering English
- liverish English
- liverleaf English
- liverless English
- liverlike English
- liverloaf English
- livermush English
- liverwort English
- liverwurst English
- nonliver English
- xenoliver English
- hepar Latin
- hepatitis Latin
- hēpar Latin
- hēpatītis Latin
- iecorinus Latin
- iecur Latin
- Fettleber German
- Gänseleber German
- Kalbsleber German
- Leber German
- Leberdegeneration German
- Leberkäse German
- Leberschaden German
- Leberschädigung German
- Lebertran German
- Lebervergrößerung German
- Leberwurst German
- Leberzirrhose German
- Stopfleber German
- leberkrank German
- leberspezifisch German
- ἧπαρ Ancient Greek
- *Hyekʷ- Proto-Indo-European
- *Hyékʷr̥ Proto-Indo-European
- *leyp- Proto-Indo-European
- hepatitt Norwegian Bokmål
- lever Norwegian Bokmål
- *librō Proto-Germanic
- lever Swedish
- レバー Japanese
- hepatitt Norwegian Nynorsk
- lever Norwegian Nynorsk
- lifer Old English
- liver Middle English
- lifr Old Norse
- leverpostej Danish
- postej Danish
- lifur Icelandic
- ήπαρ Greek (modern)
- hepar Indonesian
- lebara Old High German
- livara Old High German
- livur Faroese
- *libru gmw-pro
- *levara Old Dutch
- *livara Old Dutch
- *jekʷor Proto-Italic
- liva Tok Pisin
- liuær Old Danish
- łaower Vilamovian
- *eyékʷər Proto-Hellenic
- *yêkʷər Proto-Hellenic
- liba Kriol
- liba Torres Strait Creole