aik
Scots
/ek/
noun
Definitions
- (now) oak
Etymology
Inherited from Middle English ook inherited from Old English āc (oak) inherited from *aik inherited from Proto-Germanic *aiks (oak) derived from Proto-Indo-European *h₂eyǵ- (oak, goat).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*h₂eyǵ-
Gloss
oak, goat
Concept
Semantic Field
Agriculture and vegetation
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Acton English
- Aighton English
- Oakville English
- Ogden English
- ac- English
- durmast oak English
- oak English
- oakbark English
- oaked English
- oaken English
- oakleaf English
- oaklike English
- oakling English
- oakmoss English
- oakness English
- oakwood English
- oaky English
- she-oak English
- tanoak English
- aegides Latin
- aesculus Latin
- αἰγίλωψ Ancient Greek
- αἰγίς Ancient Greek
- αἴξ Ancient Greek
- αἶγᾰ, αἴξ Ancient Greek
- *h₂eyǵ- Proto-Indo-European
- *aiks Proto-Germanic
- オーク Japanese
- ac Old English
- æcern Old English
- āc Old English
- oken Middle English
- ook Middle English
- eik Old Norse
- โอ๊ก Thai
- eih Old High German
- այծ Old Armenian
- *aik gmw-pro
- *eik Old Dutch
- *voohi Proto-Finnic
- ek Old Saxon
- ožys Lithuanian
- ąžuolas Lithuanian
- uuk Marshallese
- ek Old Frisian
- ēk Old Frisian
- *aidza Proto-Albanian
- *aidzijā Proto-Albanian
- *aignjā Proto-Albanian
- oaka Malagasy