Danish

edit

Etymology

edit

From Old Norse bók (beech), from Proto-Germanic *bōkō, cognate with English beech, German Buche. The Danish form has the vowel from the old collective noun bøge (in place names), from Proto-Germanic *bōkiją. The word goes back to Proto-Indo-European *bʰeh₂ǵos (beech), which is also the source of Latin fāgus, Ancient Greek φηγός (phēgós).

Pronunciation

edit
  • IPA(key): /bøːˀɣ/, [ˈb̥øˀj]

Noun

edit

bøg c (singular definite bøgen, plural indefinite bøge)

  1. beech (a tree of the genus Fagus)

Declension

edit

Synonyms

edit

Further reading

edit

Norwegian Bokmål

edit

Etymology

edit

From Swedish bög.

Noun

edit

bøg m

  1. (slightly colloquial, sometimes derogatory) a gay man; gay, fag, queer, poof