French word pogne comes from Latin manus, English old, Proto-Indo-European *pewǵ-, Proto-Indo-European *puḱnos, Proto-Indo-European *puk-, and later Old French poing (Hand.)
Dictionary entry | Language | Definition |
---|---|---|
manus | Latin (lat) | (figuratively) bravery, valor. (figuratively) violence, fighting. (legal) an arrest. (legal) legal power of a man over his wife. (military, nautical) grappling hooks used to snare enemy vessels. A side, part, faction. A stake (in dice). A thrust with a sword. Branch of a tree. Group of people. Group, company, host, multitude of people, especially of soldiers. Hand. Handwriting. Labor. Paw of [...] |
old | English (eng) | (with "the") People who are old; old beings; the older generation, taken as a group. (heading) Of an earlier time.. (obsolete) Excessive, abundant.. A grammatical intensifier, often used in describing something positive. (Mostly in idioms like good old, big old and little old, any old and some old.). Familiar.. Former, previous.. Having existed or lived for the specified time.. Obsolete; [...] |
*pewǵ- | Proto-Indo-European (ine-pro) | |
*puḱnos | Proto-Indo-European (ine-pro) | |
*puk- | Proto-Indo-European (ine-pro) | |
*puǵ-no- | Proto-Indo-European (ine-pro) | |
*pugnos | Proto-Italic (itc-pro) | |
pugnus | Latin (lat) | A fist; a hand with all fingers curled up. A fistful, handful. |
poing | Old French (fro) | Hand. |
Old French | Dutch (nld) | |
Old French | English (eng) | The French language as spoken or written from the 9th to the early 14th century. |
pogne | French (fra) |