train
Norman
noun
Definitions
- (Jersey) train
Etymology
Inherited from Old French train (a drawing out, a delay) inherited from Latin *tragināre, trahō (I drag, drag, I pull, pull, haul).
Origin
Latin
trahō
Gloss
I drag, drag, I pull, pull, haul
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
- train English
- *martyrāre Latin
- *tragere Latin
- *tragināre Latin
- *traginō Latin
- *traginō, *tragināre Latin
- *trago, tragēre, *tragō Latin
- *tragīnāre Latin
- *tragō Latin
- abstraho Latin
- attraho Latin
- circumtraho Latin
- contraho Latin
- detraho Latin
- distraho Latin
- extraho Latin
- intertraho Latin
- intraho Latin
- obtraho Latin
- pertraho Latin
- protraho Latin
- retraho Latin
- subtraho Latin
- supertraho Latin
- testitrahus Latin
- tracto Latin
- trahax Latin
- trahere Latin
- trahere, traho, trahō Latin
- trahitorius Latin
- trahō Latin
- *dʰregʰ- Proto-Indo-European
- train Middle English
- traktor Danish
- train Old French
- traire Old French
- traïner Old French
- traginar Catalan, Valencian
- tren Galician
- train Middle French