cours
Middle English
noun
Definitions
- course
Etymology
Borrowed from Old French cours derived from Latin cursus (course, a running, plunder, hostile inroad, course of a race, running, the act of running, act of running).
Origin
Latin
cursus
Gloss
course, a running, plunder, hostile inroad, course of a race, running, the act of running, act of running
Concept
Semantic Field
Law
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- aftercourse English
- course English
- course load English
- coursebook English
- courseless English
- courselike English
- courseload English
- coursemate English
- coursepack English
- courseth English
- courseware English
- coursework English
- e-course English
- forecourse English
- full-course yellow English
- midcourse English
- minicourse English
- multicourse English
- palaeocourse English
- postcourse English
- precourse English
- racecourse English
- stringcourse English
- subcourse English
- telecourse English
- timecourse English
- watercourse English
- *accursāre Latin
- currō Latin
- cursarius Latin
- cursivus Latin
- cursualis Latin
- cursus Latin
- cursārius Latin
- cursīvus Latin
- Kurs German
- kurzus Hungarian
- corsaro Italian
- corsivo Italian
- corso Italian
- cursus Dutch, Flemish
- cours French
- course French
- курс Russian
- curso Spanish, Castilian
- *ḱers- Proto-Indo-European
- curso Portuguese
- kurs Swedish
- コース Japanese
- cúrsa Irish
- cours Old French
- curs Old French
- kurso Esperanto
- curs Catalan, Valencian
- course Norman
- cursu Asturian
- cors Friulian
- kurs Crimean Tatar
- كورس Gulf Arabic