Prinz
German (Berlin)
/pʀɪnt͡s/
noun
Definitions
- prince
Etymology
Derived from Old French prince derived from Latin prīnceps (first head, first, foremost).
Origin
Latin
prīnceps
Gloss
first head, first, foremost
Concept
Semantic Field
Quantity
Ontological Category
Other
Kanji
初
Emoji
🥇
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Princeton English
- coprince English
- grand prince English
- merprince English
- prince English
- prince bishop English
- princedom English
- princeful English
- princehood English
- princekin English
- princeless English
- princelet English
- princelike English
- princeling English
- princely English
- princeship English
- princess English
- princewood English
- princified English
- *prince(s), *prince Latin
- princeps Latin
- principalis Latin
- principissa Latin
- principium Latin
- prīnceps Latin
- prīnceps, prīncipem Latin
- prīnceps, prīncipem, princeps Latin
- Märchen German
- Märchenprinz German
- Traum German
- Traumprinz German
- principe Italian
- principesco Italian
- principessa Italian
- prins Dutch, Flemish
- prince French
- princesse French
- принц Russian
- principesco Spanish, Castilian
- príncipe Spanish, Castilian
- πρῖγκιψ Ancient Greek
- *keh₂p- Proto-Indo-European
- prins Swedish
- プリンス Japanese
- prins Norwegian Nynorsk
- prins Danish
- princ Czech
- prince Old French
- princo Esperanto
- princ Serbo-Croatian
- princeza Serbo-Croatian
- प्रिंस Hindi
- պրինց Armenian
- prinț Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- prinsipe Cebuano
- prince Middle Dutch
- prens Turkish
- prinse Manx
- prinsipe Tagalog
- prince Middle French
- prints Estonian
- prinse Middle Low German
- prinze Middle Low German
- princ Slovak
- princ Slovene
- prince Old Occitan
- prins Western Frisian