From Proto-Germanic *kalbaz. kalfr m (genitive kalfs, plural kalfar) calf Icelandic: kálfur Faroese: kálvur Norn: kvålv Norwegian Nynorsk: kalv; (dialectal)...
See also: kałfa kalfa accusative/genitive plural of kalfr From Ottoman Turkish قلفه (kalfa), from Arabic خَلِيفَة (ḵalīfa, literally “follower, successor”)...
English Wikipedia has an article on: Calthwaite Wikipedia From Old Norse kalfr (“calf”) + þveit (“clearing”). Calthwaite A village in Hesket parish, Westmorland...
kalver m indefinite plural of kalv From Old Norse kalfr, from Proto-Germanic *kalbaz. kalver m calf Declension of kalver (strong a-stem) Swedish: kalv...
From Old Norse kalfr (“calf”), from Proto-Germanic *kalbaz, from Proto-Indo-European *gʷolbʰo- (“womb, animal young”). Compare Faroese kálvur, Danish...
See also: Kálvur From Old Norse kalfr (“calf”), from Proto-Germanic *kalbaz, from Proto-Indo-European *gʷolbʰo- (“womb, animal young”). Compare Icelandic...
From Old Norse kalfr (“calf”), from Proto-Germanic *kalbaz, cognate with Norwegian, Swedish kalv, Dutch kalf, German Kalb, and English calf. IPA(key):...
*kalf, Old Saxon kalf, Old Dutch kalf, Old High German kalb. Also Old Norse kalfr, which was a masculine a-stem, and Gothic 𐌺𐌰𐌻𐌱𐍉 (kalbō), which was...
(“Karlsøya”), the first part of the word comes from the male given name Kalfr, derived from Kalven, formerly meaning "the little island which lies next...
(1910) “kalfi”, in A Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic, Oxford: Clarendon Press; also available at the Internet Archive kalfi dative singular of kalfr...