Hal

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Contents

Danish

Noun

hal

  1. hall



Dutch

Noun

Plural hallen
Diminutive halletje
Diminutive plural halletjes

hal m. or f.

  1. hall, hallway



Hungarian

Etymology 1

From the same Proto-Uralic root *kala as Finnish and Estonian kala

Noun

hal

  1. fish

Etymology 2

From the same Proto-Uralic root *kole as Finnish kuolla

Verb

hal

  1. to die



Indonesian

Noun

hal

  1. affair



Old English

Etymology

From Germanic *haila-, from Indo-European *kailo- ‘healthy, intact, well-omened’. Cognate with Old Frisian hēl, Old Saxon hēl (Dutch heel, geheel ‘healthy’), Old High German heil (German heil ‘healthy’), Old Norse heill (Swedish hel ‘whole’), Gothic 𐌷𐌰𐌹𐌻𐍃. The IE root is also the source of Greek κοῖλυ ‘goodness, beauty’, Welsh coel ‘sign’, Old Church Slavonic целъ (Russian целый ‘whole, healthy’).

Pronunciation

Adjective

(ġe)hāl

  1. sound, healthy, intact
    Iosep axode hwæðer hira fæder wære hal: Joseph asked whether their father were well. (Genesis)
  2. whole, undivided

Descendents



Swedish

Adjective

hal, halare, halast

  1. slippery



Turkish

Noun

hal

  1. situation

Synonyms

io:hal id:hal it:hal ku:hal hu:hal pl:hal fi:hal

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