þungr
Old Norse
adj
Definitions
- heavy
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Germanic *þunguz inherited from Proto-Indo-European *téngʰus, *tengʰ- (be heavy, be difficult, pull).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*tengʰ-
Gloss
be heavy, be difficult, pull
Concept
Semantic Field
Basic actions and technology
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- *tengʰ- Proto-Indo-European
- *tn̥gʰyéti Proto-Indo-European
- *téngʰus Proto-Indo-European
- topptung Norwegian Bokmål
- tung Norwegian Bokmål
- tungindustri Norwegian Bokmål
- tungrodd Norwegian Bokmål
- tungtvann Norwegian Bokmål
- tungtveiende Norwegian Bokmål
- tungvekt Norwegian Bokmål
- *þunguz Proto-Germanic
- tung Swedish
- ciężki Polish
- topptung Norwegian Nynorsk
- tung Norwegian Nynorsk
- tunghøyrd Norwegian Nynorsk
- tungindustri Norwegian Nynorsk
- tungsam Norwegian Nynorsk
- tungtvatn Norwegian Nynorsk
- tungvatn Norwegian Nynorsk
- tungvekt Norwegian Nynorsk
- þungleikr Old Norse
- þyngja Old Norse
- tung Danish
- *tęgnǫti Proto-Slavic
- *tęgъ Proto-Slavic
- *tęžьkъ Proto-Slavic
- *tǫgъ Proto-Slavic
- těžký Czech
- težak Serbo-Croatian
- тежак Serbo-Croatian
- hyggjuþungur Icelandic
- ofurþungur Icelandic
- þungur Icelandic
- tungur Faroese
- توڠستن Malay
- тежък Bulgarian
- тежок Macedonian
- ťažký Slovak
- frammtong Westrobothnian
- tong Westrobothnian
- težek Slovene
- тѧжькъ Church Slavic, Church Slavonic, Old Church Slavonic, Old Slavonic, Old Bulgarian
- tingus Lithuanian
- тѧжькъ Old East Slavic
- śěžki Lower Sorbian
- *ting- Proto-Balto-Slavic
- ćežki Upper Sorbian
- ciynżki Silesian
- тяжкый Rusyn