The word "careen" has Germanic origins, derived from the Old Provençal word "carinar" meaning "to keel over." It entered the English language in the early 19th century.
The name "green" for the color comes from the Old English word "grene," which was derived from the Germanic word "grōni," meaning "green."
The word "aspen" is from Proto-Germanic, and ultimately from Latin. Proto-Germanic is the "hypothetical prehistoric ancestor of all Germanic languages, including English." Quoted from the first related link below. Please see the second link below for the etymology (word origin).
The root word for "two" is the Old English word "twā," which evolved from the Proto-Germanic word "twai."
The root word for "ladder" is "Hlæder" from Old English.
Etude
prize, recompense, payment, repayment, remuneration, incentive, compensation, bonus, return, gift...
it is called singing class
The Old English and Germanic word for "Earth" is believed to stem from the proto-Germanic word *erþō, meaning "ground" or "soil." This word likely evolved into the modern English term "Earth."
Hand is a core Germanic vocabulary word, presumed to derive from a Germanic root *handuz which is unattested.
From the Germanic word Vogel. English is essentially a Germanic language which has evolved over time into the distortion it is today.
Yes, the word "war" is of Germanic Origin.It entered English before 1150, from late Old English werre < Old North French < Germanic; cognate with Old High German werra, meaning "strife."
It is a word for a kind of dog. It comes from the Germanic, and in Germanic languages it is the general term for a dog. In English, though, it refers to those breeds of dog used for hunting and tracking.
The German word for yeah is ja.
The word has Proto-Germanic origins.
Yes, the noun compensation is an abstract noun, a word for a concept.
The word "what" is very old: it's been in use in one form or another in English (and in Germanic, and in Indo-European--the languages from which English is descended) for at least 5,000 years.