How many points in Scrabble is sang worth? sang how many points in Words With Friends? What does sang mean? Get all these answers on this page.
See how to calculate how many points for sang.
Is sang a Scrabble word?
Yes. The word sang is a Scrabble US word. The word sang is worth 5 points in Scrabble:
S1A1N1G2
Is sang a Scrabble UK word?
Yes. The word sang is a Scrabble UK word and has 5 points:
S1A1N1G2
Is sang a Words With Friends word?
Yes. The word sang is a Words With Friends word. The word sang is worth 7 points in Words With Friends (WWF):
S1A1N2G3
You can make 16 words from sang according to the Scrabble US and Canada dictionary.
sang asng snag nsag ansg nasg sagn asgn sgan gsan agsn gasn snga nsga sgna gsna ngsa gnsa angs nags agns gans ngas gnas
Note: these 'words' (valid or invalid) are all the permutations of the word sang. These words are obtained by scrambling the letters in sang.
sang
sang
Inherited from Old Catalan sang~sanch, from Vulgar Latin sanguem, alteration of Classical Latin sanguinem, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₁sh₂-én-, oblique stem of *h₁ésh₂r̥ (“blood”). Its gender could also be masculine in Old Catalan, as it was in Latin. Compare Occitan sang, French sang.
sang f (plural sangs)
From Old Norse sǫngr.
sang c (singular definite sangen, plural indefinite sange)
sang
Cognate with Western Cham sang.
sang
Inherited from Old French sanc, from Vulgar Latin sanguem, alteration of Latin sanguinem, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₁sh₂-én-, oblique stem of *h₁ésh₂r̥ (“blood”).
sang m (plural sangs)
sang m
sang
sang (classifier bôh)
Siu, Lap Minh (2009 December) Developing the First Preliminary Dictionary of North American Jarai[1], Texas Tech University, page 106
From Latin sanguis. Cognate to Catalan sang, French sang, Italian sangue, Piedmontese sangh, Romanian sânge, Spanish sangre.
sang m (invariable)
sang
sang
sang
From Old French sanc, from Vulgar Latin sanguem, alteration of Latin sanguinem, accusative of sanguis.
sang m (plural sangs)
From Old French sanc, from Vulgar Latin sanguem, alteration of Latin sanguinem, accusative of sanguis.
sang m (uncountable)
From Old Norse sǫngr (“song”), from Proto-Germanic *sangwaz (“singing, song”), from Proto-Indo-European *songʷʰos, derived from *singwaną (“to sing”), from Proto-Indo-European *séngʷʰ-e-ti, from *sengʷʰ- (“to recite, sing”).
sang m (definite singular sangen, indefinite plural sanger, definite plural sangene)
sang
“sang” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
From Old Occitan, from Vulgar Latin sanguem, alteration of Latin sanguinem, accusative of sanguis.
sang m or f (uncountable)
From Proto-Germanic *sangwaz. Cognate with Old High German sanc, Old Norse sǫngr.
sang m (nominative plural sangas)
sang m (plural sẽng)
From Vulgar Latin sanguem, alteration of Latin sanguinem, accusative of sanguis.
sang m
Borrowed from Hokkien 蔥/葱 (chhang, “green onion; spring onion; scallion”). Compare Kapampangan sang.
sang (Baybayin spelling ᜐᜅ᜔) (obsolete)
sang • (郎, 𢀨, , , 廊, 朗)
sang • (郎, 𨖅, 𨄂)
Cognate with Eastern Cham sang.
sang
From -ng (“irrealis negation suffix”).
sang
Cognate with Bouyei saangl.
sang (Sawndip forms 𮪼 or 桑 or 𫶐 or 𱅷 or 丧 or 𭫌, 1957–1982 spelling saŋ)