ṡlākh

ṡlākh
श्लाख्

Indonesian dictionary. 2014.

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  • slaughter — [13] Slaughter was borrowed from Old Norse *slahtr, which went back to the same prehistoric Germanic base (*slakh ‘strike’) that produced English slay. Old English appears to have had its own version of the word, *slæht, which survived into the… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • slay — [OE] Etymologically, slay means ‘hit’ (its German relative schlagen still does), but from the earliest Old English times it was also used for ‘kill’. It comes from a prehistoric Germanic base *slakh , *slag , *slög ‘hit’, which also produced… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • sledge — English has two words sledge. The sledge [OE] of sledgehammer [15] was once a word in its own right, meaning ‘heavy hammer’. It goes back to the prehistoric Germanic base *slakh ‘hit’, source also of English slaughter, slay, etc. Sledge ‘snow… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • slug — English has at least two, possibly four distinct words slug. The oldest, ‘shell less mollusc’ [15], originally meant ‘slow or lazy person’. It was not applied to the slow moving animal until the 18th century. It was probably a borrowing from a… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • sly — [12] Etymologically, sly means ‘able to hit’. It was borrowed from Old Norse slǣgr ‘clever, cunning’, which went back ultimately to the prehistoric Germanic base *slakh , *slag , *slōg ‘hit’ (source also of English slaughter, slay, etc). The… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • slaughter — [13] Slaughter was borrowed from Old Norse *slahtr, which went back to the same prehistoric Germanic base (*slakh ‘strike’) that produced English slay. Old English appears to have had its own version of the word, *slæht, which survived into the… …   Word origins

  • slay — [OE] Etymologically, slay means ‘hit’ (its German relative schlagen still does), but from the earliest Old English times it was also used for ‘kill’. It comes from a prehistoric Germanic base *slakh , *slag , *slög ‘hit’, which also produced… …   Word origins

  • sledge — English has two words sledge. The sledge [OE] of sledgehammer [15] was once a word in its own right, meaning ‘heavy hammer’. It goes back to the prehistoric Germanic base *slakh ‘hit’, source also of English slaughter, slay, etc. Sledge ‘snow… …   Word origins

  • slug — English has at least two, possibly four distinct words slug. The oldest, ‘shell less mollusc’ [15], originally meant ‘slow or lazy person’. It was not applied to the slow moving animal until the 18th century. It was probably a borrowing from a… …   Word origins

  • sly — [12] Etymologically, sly means ‘able to hit’. It was borrowed from Old Norse slǣgr ‘clever, cunning’, which went back ultimately to the prehistoric Germanic base *slakh , *slag , *slōg ‘hit’ (source also of English slaughter, slay, etc). The… …   Word origins

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