Hell Hole
Home
hell hole
Middle English hoom = home, dwelling; Dutch heem = farm; heimelijk = private, secret; German: heim = village, hamlet; heimat = homeland; Heimlich = homely; Unheimlich = uncanny, strange, unhomely; see Sanskrit kshema = safety, safe abode; kshi = to dwell – from the etymon *KAM/HAM = to cover over; Greek kamara, Latin camera = vaulted place; kaminos = oven; Icelandic: hamr = a covering – from the etymon *KEL/*HEL = to hide, cover; Hebrew bayith = house, family, temple, within – from banah = to build, repair, set-up; and biyn = to separate, discern, understand; beyn = among, between (in the sense of being able to tell apart); biynah = knowledge, wisdom – from the etymons *BTH = interiority, internal space, container, habitation; what is detached, cut, distributed in parts; *BOUTH = to dwell, spend the night, lodge; *BITH = separated place, habitation, interior, locality, propriety, family; Greek oikia = residence, abode; oikos = dwelling, family, household, temple; oikeo = to reside, occupy, inhabit, remain; oikema = tenement, prison; oikodomeo = house builder, edifier; oikonomia = management of a household, stewardship; oikoumene = land, terrene part of the globe, earth, world; see endemeo = to be in one’s own country, to be at home, endemic – from demos = people, the public (as bound- together socially); from deo = to bind, knit, tie; idios = pertaining to self, one’s own; private, separate, apart; idiotes = private person, ignoramus...
endemic, economy, acumen, ecumenical, homeland, homely, unhomely, hamlet, hole, hell, camera, chamber, chemise, chimney, hide, cover...
House
hide
Middle English hous; Anglosaxon hus; Dutch huis; German haus = dwelling place, family; allied to `hoard'– from the etymon *KEUDH = to hide; Middle English housen = to build a house; see Anglosaxon husel = sacrament, eucharist, holy rite; French housse = mantle, cloth, trappings of a horse; Icelandic husi = case; Latin housia = long tunic; Anglosaxon heolstor = cover – from the etymon *HUL = to cover, hide, `hull'; Old French hourd = scaffolding; Dutch horde = hurdle; see Greek keuthein; Anglosaxon hydan = to hide; Middle English hidden, huden; Latin custos = custodian; Middle English hyde; Latin cutis, Greek kutos, skutos = skin – from the etymon *SKEU = to cover; see English `sky' (Greek skene = curtain, tent); a `hide of land’ is a measure of land or `estate sufficient to support one household’; Middle English hotte = hut to huddle-in (`the true notion of huddle or hudder was to crowd together for protection in a place of shelter’; German hutte; Swedish hydda = cote, cottage, hut, nook – from the etymon *HEUD = to hide; compare *KEU/HEU = to swell out, to be hollow; Sanskrit cunya = void, hollow; Greek kuar = cavity; cuein = to be pregnant; Latin cauus = hollow, `cave'; compare Hebrew revach = room, enlargement, interval; ravach = to have ample room (to breathe), to avoid suffocation – from the etymon *ROUH = aerial dilation, to fill space; ruwach = blow, breathe, spirit, wind; German raum = space, room...
custodian, home, hoard, hoarding, hide, hut, hutch, husk, husband, hustings, holster, hive, hovel, skin, sky, cave, cavern, breathe, blow, spirit...