toun

Middle English

/tuːn/

noun
Definitions
  • town

Etymology

Inherited from Old English tūn (enclosure, homestead, town, farmstead, settlement, garden, yard) inherited from Proto-Germanic *tūną (enclosure, fence) derived from Gaulish dunon derived from Proto-Celtic *dūnom (stronghold, rampart, hill, fortified town, fortress, hillfort) derived from Proto-Indo-European *dʰewh₂- (smoke, haze, raise dust, mist, come full circle, finish, fume, blow, dark, whisk, vapor, breath, gray, deep, camouflage).

Origin

Proto-Indo-European

*dʰewh₂-

Gloss

smoke, haze, raise dust, mist, come full circle, finish, fume, blow, dark, whisk, vapor, breath, gray, deep, camouflage

Concept
Semantic Field

Basic actions and technology

Ontological Category

Action/Process

Kanji

暗, 闇, 冥

Emoji
🌋 🚬

Timeline

Distribution of cognates by language

Geogrpahic distribution of cognates

Cognates and derived terms