lausaz
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Old Norse — dǫnsk tunga, dansk tunga ( Danish tongue ), norrœnt mál ( Norse language ) Spoken in Nordic countries, Scotland, Ireland, England and Wales, Isle of Man, Normandy, Vinland, the Volga and places in between … Wikipedia
leu- — To loosen, divide, cut apart. Derivatives include forlorn, analysis, and solve. I. Extended Germanic root *leus . 1. a. lorn, losel, from Old English lēosan, to lose; … Universalium
loose — [13] Loose is one of a large family of words that go back ultimately to Indo European *lau , *leu , *lu , which denoted ‘undoing’. It includes (via Greek) analyse and paralyse, (via Latin) dissolve and solution, and (via Germanic) lose and the… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
-less — suffix meaning lacking, cannot be, does not, from O.E. leas, from leas free (from), devoid (of), false, feigned, from P.Gmc. *lausaz (Cf. Du. loos, Ger. los less, O.N. lauss loose, free, vacant, dissolute, M.Du. los, Ger. los loose, free, Goth.… … Etymology dictionary
loose — {{11}}loose (adj.) early 13c., not securely fixed; c.1300, unbound, from O.N. lauss loose, free, vacant, dissolute, cognate with O.E. leas devoid of, false, feigned, incorrect, from P.Gmc. *lausaz (Cf. Dan. lès loose, untied, Swed. lös loose,… … Etymology dictionary
lausa- Ⅱ — *lausa , *lausaz germ., Adjektiv: nhd. los, frei; ne. loose (Adjektiv), free (Adjektiv); Rekontruktionsbasis: got., an., ae., afries., anfrk., as., ahd.; Vw … Germanisches Wörterbuch
loose — [13] Loose is one of a large family of words that go back ultimately to Indo European *lau , *leu , *lu , which denoted ‘undoing’. It includes (via Greek) analyse and paralyse, (via Latin) dissolve and solution, and (via Germanic) lose and the… … Word origins