knol

Etymology
From earlier ; first attested in the early sixteenth century. The earliest attested meaning in Dutch is "turnip" (now obsolete, the derived having become the standard term), which appears to be the result of a semantic narrowing from a broader meaning "bulging protrusion"; compare for example the cognates 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1) tuber
 * 2) corm, bulbotuber
 * 3) bulge, protrusion
 * 4) nag, inferior horse
 * 5) workhorse, draft horse
 * 1) workhorse, draft horse

Etymology
From, from , , , possibly related to.

Related to Old Norse (found only in names of places), Dutch, Swedish , Danish  and German.

Noun

 * 1) a knoll