Indo-European Connection LogoINDO-EUROPEAN  CONNECTIONIndo-European Connection Logo
 
Indo-European Connection LogoIndo-European Connection LogoIndo-European Connection LogoINDO-EUROPEAN  CONNECTIONIndo-European Connection LogoIndo-European Connection LogoIndo-European Connection Logo

PATH

indo-european path icon

This word stays in a connection to the word for FOOT which kind of gives the meaning to "a path" as "a road that you walk on with your feet".



PA-

---> Finnish: pade

---> Karelian: patehin, pajehta

Old English: pæþ

Middle English: path

English: path

Old Frisian: path

Old Saxon: path

Old Dutch: path

Middle Dutch: pat

Bulgarian: път (pǎt)

Macedonian: пат (pat)

Sanskrit: पथिन् (páthin)

Ancient Greek: πάτος (pátos)

Greek: πάτος (pátos)

Old Polish: pąt (pant)

Avestan: paṇ‎tā̊

Old Persian: 𐎱𐎰 (p-th)

Middle Persian: pnd /pand/ ("path, counsel, advice")

Parthian: pand ("counsel"), pndʾn /pandān/ ("path")

Palula (Dardic): páand

West Frisian: paad

Dutch: pad

Luxembourgish: Pad


PFA-

Old High German: pfad

German: Pfad


PO-

Ancient Greek: πόντος (póntos)

Greek: πόντος (póntos)

Old Church Slavonic: пѫть ⱂⱘⱅⱐ (pǫtĭ)

Slovene: pọ̑t

Czech: pouť

Polabian: pǫt

Polish: pąć, pątnik

Latin: pōns

Asturian: ponte

Breton: pont

Catalan: pont

Cornish: pons

English: pontoon

French: pont

Galician: ponte

Istriot: ponto

Italian: ponte

Occitan: pònt

Old Occitan: Ponce (now a place name and surname)

Portuguese: ponte

Sardinian: ponte, ponti

Sicilian: ponti

Venetian: pónte, pónt

Walloon: pont

Welsh: pont


PU-

Aromanian: punte

Calabrian: puonti

Dalmatian: puant

Friulian: puint

Romanian: punte

Romansch: punt

Spanish: puente

Pashto: پونده‎ (pūndaʿh) ("heel")

Serbo-Croatian: пу̑т, pȗt

Old East Slavic: путь (putĭ)

Russian: путь (putʹ)

Ukrainian: путь (putʹ)

Slovak: púť

Belarusian: пуць (pucʹ)

Upper Sorbian: puć

Lower Sorbian: puś


HUN-

Old Armenian: հուն (hun)

Middle Armenian: հուն (hun)

Armenian: հուն (hun)


FIN- PIN-

Old English: findan

Middle English: finden

Scots: find, fynd

English: find

Old Frisian: finda

West Frisian: fine

Old Saxon: findan, fīthan

Low German: finden

Dutch: vinden

Afrikaans: vind

Old High German: findan

Middle High German: vinden

German: finden

Old Norse: finna

Icelandic: finna

Faroese: finna

Swedish: finna

Danish: finde

Norwegian: finne

Gothic: 𐍆𐌹𐌽𐌸𐌰𐌽 (finþan)

Old Prussian: pintis


AIT

Old Irish: áitt ("place"), étain ("I find")

Irish: áit

Scottish Gaelic: àite


Article published on the 30th of October 2018.