Axe in almost every language
1. Axe2. Byl
3. Sëpatë
4. ākisi
5. fas
6. Kats’in
7. balta
8. Aizkora
9. Siakiera
10. Kuṭhāra
11. Sjekira
12. bradva
13. Destral
14. Ax
15. Nkhwangwa
16. Fǔtóu
17. Sekera
18. Økse
19. Bijl
20. Hakilo (esperanto)
21. Kirves
22. Hache
23. Bile
24. ajakhi
25. Axt
26. Tsekoúri
27. Kuhāḍī
28. Rach
29. *R*N (hebrew)
30. kulhaadee
31. Fejsze
32. Öxi
33. Anyụike
34. Kapak
35. Tuagh
36. Ascia
37. Ono
38. Koḍali
39. pouthaw
40. dokki
41. Bivir
42. khuaan
43. Securis (latin)
44. Sekira
45. Famaky
46. kēāṭāli
47. Toki
48. Kuṟhāḍa
49. Sükh
50. pu sein
51. Ēksa
52. Øks
53. KURA (odia)
54. *B* (Persian)
55. Topór
56. Machado
57. Kuhāṛī
58. Topor
59. Ak
60. Selepe
61. *K* (sindhi)
62. porava
63. Hacha
64. Kampak
65. Shoka
66. Yxa
67. Taʙar
68. Kōṭāri
69. BALTA (tatar)
70. Goḍḍali
71. K̄hwān
72. sokyra
73. Cây rìu
74. Mwyell
75. Izembe
76. AKS (yiddish)
77. Ãke
Popularity of Use
A % E % I % O % U %
51 67% 23 30% 27 35% 19 25% 16 21%
B % C % D % F % G %
10 13% 7 9% 9 11% 4 5% 3 3%
H % J % K % L % M %
16 21% 4 5% 38 50% 12 15% 5 6%
N % P % Q % R % S %
5 6% 9 11% 0 0% 23 30% 22 28%
T % V % W % X % Y %
15 19% 4 5% 4 5% 5 6% 7 9%
Z %
3 3%
Popularity of use
67% A:
50% K, A: Ak, *K* (sindhi),
35% I, K, A:
30% R, E, I, K, A: Ãke, *R*N (hebrew),
28% S, R, E, I, K, A: Sekira, Ēksa, AKS (yiddish), ākisi, Siakiera, Sekera,
25% O, S, R, E, I, K, A: Ono, Øks, Økse,
21% H, U, O, S, R, E, I, K, A: Kuhāṛī, Shoka, Sükh, Securis (latin), KURA (odia),
19% T, H, U, O, S, R, E, I, K, A: Toki, Kōṭāri, Tsekoúri, Kuṭhāra,
15% L, T, H, U, O, S, R, E, I, K, A: Hakilo (esperanto), kēāṭāli,
12% B, L, T, H, U, O, S, R, E, I, K, A: Taʙar, BALTA (tatar), *B* (Persian), balta, Bile,
11% P, D, B, L, T, H, U, O, S, R, E, I, K, A: Topór, Selepe, Topor, Kuṟhāḍa, Koḍali, dokki, kulhaadee, Kapak, Destral, Kuhāḍī, Sëpatë,
9% Y, C, P, D, B, L, T, H, U, O, S, R, E, I, K, A: sokyra, Cây rìu, Ascia, Hacha, Hache, Byl, Rach,
6% X, N, M, Y, C, P, D, B, L, T, H, U, O, S, R, E, I, K, A: Öxi, Yxa, Axt, Ax, Axe, khuaan, pu sein, Anyụike, Kats’in, Machado, Kampak,
5% W, V, J, F, X, N, M, Y, C, P, D, B, L, T, H, U, O, S, R, E, I, K, A: K̄hwān, Mwyell, pouthaw, Bivir, porava, bradva, Kirves, Bijl, ajakhi, Sjekira, Fǔtóu, Famaky, fas,
3% Z, G, W, V, J, F, X, N, M, Y, C, P, D, B, L, T, H, U, O, S, R, E, I, K, A: Fejsze, Izembe, Aizkora, Goḍḍali, Tuagh, Nkhwangwa,
0% Q
Conclusion: Originating in the A-K linguistic subgroup;
A-K subgroup sex % dev. Chain bandgap
Inuit M 83% (A; K; N, Q, L, S, O)
To Dig 78% (A; K; I; O, E)
Inuit F 75% (A; K; L; I; T, O, S) ●
Crow 74% (A; K; R; O; G)
To fuck 72% (A; K; E; I, T)
Axe 67% (A; K; I; R, E)
Ainu Dictionary 54% (A; K; N; I; U; M, O)
Dog 53% (A; K; N; U, E; I; O)
Chicken 50% (A; K; I; U; N, E)
The earliest known Axe is at 50% with Ak (serbian), and the partial *K* (sindhi), this is followed by a developmental bandgap at 35% before renewed interest in the Axe at 30% with Ãke () and the partial *R*N (hebrew).
Peak axe use is at 5% before declining down through 3%.
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