IPA(key): /ˈaka/ *<span class="searchmatch">aca</span> (Proto-Italo-Western-Romance) alternative form of *acca...
*<span class="searchmatch">aca</span> The earliest <span class="searchmatch">Latin</span> name of H was ha. The loss of /h/ in common speech before the end of the Republican period made this name indistinct from a (“the...
Sicilian: ccà Ibero-Romance: Galician: <span class="searchmatch">acá</span> Portuguese: <span class="searchmatch">acá</span> (literary or dialectal) ⇒ cá (aphaeretic) Spanish: <span class="searchmatch">acá</span> Joan Coromines, José A[ntonio] Pascual...
is borrowed from North Caucasian; compare Kabardian шы (šə), Abkhaz аҽы (<span class="searchmatch">aĉə</span>), Avar чу (ču), Karata ичва (ičva, “mare”), Lezgi шив (šiv, “horse”) etc...
rest of the paradigm. Proto-West Germanic: *akusi Old English: æx, æces, <span class="searchmatch">acas</span>, eax Middle English: ax, axe, ex, exe, æxæ, æxe English: axe, ax Scots: aix...
Macedonian: -ач (-ač) (rare) Serbo-Croatian: (rare?) Cyrillic script: -а̄ч <span class="searchmatch">Latin</span> script: -ȃč Slovene: -áč West Slavic: Old Czech: -áč Czech: -áč, -ač Old...