ax
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
ax (plural axes)
ax (third-person singular simple present axes, present participle axing, simple past and past participle axed)
From Middle English axen, aksen, axien, from Old English ācsian and āxian, showing metathesis from āscian. Ax/aks was common in literary works until about 1600.
ax (third-person singular simple present axes, present participle axing, simple past and past participle axed)
ax
ax n (genitive singular ax, nominative plural öx)
ax
From Old English æx, æcs, from Proto-West Germanic *akusi.
ax (plural axes)
From Old English eax, from Proto-Germanic *ahsu.
ax (plural axes)
Akin to Persian خاک (xâk, “earth, soil, dust”). From Proto-Iranian *HáHhah, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂eHs- (“to be dry”).
ax f (Arabic spelling ئاخ)
ax
From Proto-Germanic *ahsą, from *ahaz (“ear (of grain)”).
ax n (genitive ax, plural ǫx)
Zoëga, Geir T. (1910) “ax”, in A Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic, Oxford: Clarendon Press; also available at the Internet Archive
ax n (plural axe)
ax n
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