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Etymology of the Italian word diabolo

the Italian word diabolo
derived from the French word diabolo
derived from the Old French word diabolique
derived from the Latin word diabolicus (devilish, diabolic; characteristic of)
derived from the Church Latin word diabolus (devil; The Devil, Satan)
derived from the Greek word diabolos, διάβολος (a traducer; specially, Satan)
derived from the Greek word diaballein, διαβάλλω (to slander, attack; literally 'to throw across')
derived from the Greek word dia, διά (through, between)
derived from the Greek word ballein, βάλλω (to throw)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *gʷelə-
derived from the Greek word diabolikos, διαβολικός
derived from the Greek word diabolos, διάβολος (a traducer; specially, Satan)
derived from the Greek word diaballein, διαβάλλω (to slander, attack; literally 'to throw across')
derived from the Greek word dia, διά (through, between)
derived from the Greek word ballein, βάλλω (to throw)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *gʷelə-

Derivations in other languages

English diabolo

Cognates

Dutch duivel, English devil, French diable, German Teufel, Icelandic djöfull, Latin diabolus, Polish diabel, Portuguese diabo, Provençal diable, Spanish diablo, Swedish djävul



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