cape
French
noun
Definitions
- cape
Etymology
Borrowed from Old Occitan capa derived from Latin cappa (cape, cloak, coat, sleeveless coat).
Origin
Latin
cappa
Gloss
cape, cloak, coat, sleeveless coat
Concept
Semantic Field
The physical world
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
崎
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Batcape English
- Capesize English
- batcape English
- cape English
- caped English
- capeless English
- capelet English
- capelike English
- capeshit English
- capesized English
- cappa English
- minicape English
- raincape English
- uncape English
- *cappellus Latin
- *excappāre Latin
- *excappō Latin
- *excappō, *excappāre Latin
- capellus Latin
- cappa Latin
- cappella Latin
- cappellus Latin
- caput Latin
- ex- Latin
- cappa Italian
- cappello Italian
- cappuccino Italian
- cape Dutch, Flemish
- chape French
- cape Norwegian Bokmål
- kappe Norwegian Bokmål
- ケープ Japanese
- cape Norwegian Nynorsk
- cæppe Old English
- capote Old French
- chape Old French
- capa Catalan, Valencian
- capă Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- κάπα Greek (modern)
- kappa Old High German
- cába Old Irish
- cap Middle French
- capa Old Portuguese
- kappe Middle Low German
- kappa Old Swedish
- capiala Romansh
- chapella Romansh
- tgapeala Romansh
- tgapela Romansh
- capa Old Occitan
- kapa Lower Sorbian
- capa Old Spanish