mark
Danish
/mark/
noun
Definitions
- field wide, open space used to grow crops or to hold farm animals
Etymology
Derived from Old Norse mǫrk (wilderness, w, borderland) inherited from Proto-Germanic *markō (boundary, boundary marker, region, border, marker, area, edge, rim).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*markō
Gloss
boundary, boundary marker, region, border, marker, area, edge, rim
Concept
Semantic Field
Social and political relations
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
端, 縁
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Quislingism English
- quisling English
- quislingize English
- Marcomanni Latin
- graphio Latin
- marca Latin
- marco Latin
- marcus Latin
- Knochenmark German
- Mark German
- Markgraf German
- Ostmark German
- Reichsmark German
- Rentenmark German
- Rückenmark German
- Westmark German
- marca German
- markerschütternd German
- markig German
- märkisch German
- marca Italian
- merk Dutch, Flemish
- *marǵ- Proto-Indo-European
- *mereg- Proto-Indo-European
- *merǵ- Proto-Indo-European
- *daniz Proto-Germanic
- *marką Proto-Germanic
- *markō Proto-Germanic
- mearc Old English
- eyðimǫrk Old Norse
- kvísl Old Norse
- merki Old Norse
- mǫrk Old Norse
- Danmark Danish
- Kvislemark Danish
- da Danish
- kvissel Danish
- obsolete open land Danish
- øde Danish
- ødemark Danish
- marka Serbo-Croatian
- марка Serbo-Croatian
- demarcar Galician
- marco Galician
- marcgrave, marcgrāve Middle Dutch
- marg Old Irish
- marc Middle High German
- 𐌼𐌰𐍂𐌺𐌰 Gothic
- *marku gmw-pro
- comarca Old Portuguese
- mark Old Swedish
- *marku Frankish
- *markōn Frankish
- mak Tok Pisin