Sex Brother Love Sister Avi 740

Sex Brother Love Sister Avi 740




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Sex Brother Love Sister Avi 740
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


^ maternal, maternity, matron, matrimony, matrix, matriculate, material, matter, madeira , alma mater , etc.

^ Dēmḗtēr Demeter ; mētrópolis "metropolis, lit., mother-city"

^ paternal, paternity, patron, patronize, pattern, patrimony, patriot, expatriate, patrician, perpetrate, compadre , etc.

^ fraternal, fraternity, fraternize, friar, [b] confrere

^ sorority

^ nepotism

^ avuncular

^ human, , humanity, ad hominem, exhume , etc

^ virile, virtue, triumvir(ate) , etc. [n]

^ regal, regalia, regicide, royal , etc.

^ corps , corpse , corporal , corporation, incorporate , etc.

^ cap, cape, chapeau, capital, chapter, capitulate , decapitate , per capita , kaput , etc.

^ language, lingo etc.

^ ocular , binoculars , etc.

^ core, cordial, record, accord, discord, concord, accordion, misericordia, courage , etc.

^ cruel , crude

^ tripod , podium , etc.

^ manual, manufacture, manuscript, manipulate, manifest, maintain, manage, manumission, emancipate, mandate, demand, commend, countermand, mandatory, masturbate etc.

^ pecunious , impecunious

^ Jump up to: a b auspices, auspicious

^ lox

^ grain, granary, granule, granite, pomegranate , etc.

^ agrarian, agriculture, pilgrim, peregrinate , etc.

^ promulgate, emulsion , etc.

^ molar (tooth)

^ immolate

^ maul , mallet , malleable

^ Spanish 'zumo' via Arabic

^ fervent, fervor, fervid, effervescence

^ saline, salsa, sauce, salad, sausage (salchicha, saucisse), salami, salary

^ semen, seminar, seminary, seminal, disseminate, inseminate, season, sative , etc.

^ member, membrane

^ "dorm, dormitory, dorter"

^ progeny, progenitor

^ nee [av]

^ nascent

^ native, nativity , etc.

^ Spa Navidad "Christmas"

^ nature, natural , etc.

^ nation, national , etc.

^ Natalia, Natalie, Natasha, Noël , etc.

^ general, generic, generate, generous, congenital, degenerate, gender, genre , etc.

^ gent, gentle, gentleman, gentile, genteel , etc.

^ genitive, primogeniture , etc.

^ ingenuous, ingenu, ingenue

^ ingenious, engine, engineer, gin (instrument, as in cotton gin ), etc.

^ germ, germinate, germane , etc., but not German

^ genitals, genitalia

^ genesis, genes, genetic , etc.

^ auction , etc.

^ author , etc.

^ augment , etc.

^ augury, inaugurate , etc.

^ August , etc.

^ auxiliary , etc.

^ "audio, audience, obey, obedience, auditorium, etc."

^ aesthetic

^ memento

^ reminisce

^ memory

^ monster

^ mathematics

^ "memory, remember, etc."

^ "mora, moratory, moratorium"

^ "martyr"

^ dekko

^ aspect, inspect, respect, prospect, perspective, retrospect, despicable, conspicuous, perspicuous, perspicacious, spectacle, spectacular, etc etc.

^ species, spice, special, specify, specific

^ spectre, spectrum

^ speculate

^ scope, -scope, -scopy

^ bishop, episcopal

^ skeptic, skeptical, skepticism

^ council , conciliate , etc.

^ clamor , claim , exclamation , etc.

^ clear , clarify , etc.

^ stylus , style (originally same meaning as stylus : a particular form of writing > style)

^ "incinerate, cinerary, cinerarium"

^ "foment, fomentation"

^ "fever, febrile"

^ "February"

^ pollute, pollution

^ fort, forte, fortitude, fortification, force, effort , etc

^ chernozem, chernukha, Cherno(byl)

^ ? Siam

^ civic , city , citizen , etc.

^ cite , incite , excite , Incitātus ( Caligula 's horse), resuscitate , solicit , etc.

^ site , situation , etc.

^ expose, exponent , depose, deponent , oppose, opponent , proponent , posit , position , positive, post , etc.

^ impeccable , impeach

^ podium , pew

^ sequence, second, segue , etc.

^ vert-, verse, versus, version, invert, convert, inverse, reverse, controversy, anniversary etc.

^ join, joinder, joint, junction, juncture, conjugal, conjugate, conjunct, adjunct, injunction, rejoin, rejoinder, jostle, joust, adjust , etc.

^ local , locate, locality, locomotion, allocate , etc.

^ epistle , pistle , epistolary , etc.

^ sect (or possibly from Lat. sequi , "follow"), -sect, sectile, section, sector, dissect, insect, intersect, resect, transect , etc.

^ carnal, carnage, carnation, carnival, carrion, caruncle, carnivorous, charnel, charcuterie, incarnate , etc., Spa carne

^ scrutiny, scrutinize , inscrutable , etc.

^ scruple , scrupulous , etc.

^ cult, culture, cultivate, incult , etc.

^ colony, colonial , etc.

^ collar, accolade, decollate , etc

^ palindrome , palimpsest, palinode

^ telegraph , television , etc.

^ evolve, revolve, involve, involucrum, convolve, devolve, voluble etc.;

^ vale, valley

^ helix, helical, helicopter

^ fruit , fructose

^ eunuch (lit. bed-keeper)

^ hectic

^ scheme, schematic

^ school, scholar, scholastic

^ rude , rudimentary , erudite




^ Reflexes of the stem in daughter languages also refer to deified beings and deities within their respective mythologies/religions: Old English Mōdra niht ('Night of the Mothers'); Celtic and Germanic Matres and Matronae ( Latin for 'Mothers and Matrons'); Latvian Māte ('Mother'); Gaulish Dea Matrona ('Divine Mother Goddess'); Sanskrit Matrikas ('Divine Mothers').

^ e.g., black friar

^ Phralipe , or Pralipe , "brotherhood", name of several Gypsy/Romany organizations, including a music band and a literary magazine.

^ kʿoyr *swesōr ; kʿeʿ < *swesros ; kʿor-kʿ < *swesŏres .

^ Varias García (2017) pointed out that a tablet from Mycene uses "tu-ka-te", whereas tablets from Knossos , Pylos and Thebes use "ko-wa" ( *korwa , later koré 'maiden, girl'). [21]

^ Although this word is attested in Hittite, it is considered a loanword from Luwian. While scholarship recognizes the likelihood of its being the reflex of the root in Anatolian , its appearance in Hittite and Luwian would indicate a different meaning, however. [25] [26]

^ The root could also be found in Anatolian languages with later attestation: Isaurian personal name Τουάτρης Touatris ; Pisidian name Δωταρι Dotari . [27] However, Simon Zsolt questions the interpretation of Dotari as a reflex, since this word is attested as a compound in male names. [28]

^ Other interpretations are "son of the yew " or "son of the boar ". [33]

^ The word is attested in Plate III of the Botorrita plaques . Patrizia de Bernardo Stempel interprets "-SUNOS" as the remnant of the root in the Celtic branch . [22] [34]

^ This is the other possible attestation of the root in the Celtic branch. [35]

^ As argued by Peyrot and Meng (2021). [41]

^ cf. divide

^ bridegome in Middle English , subsequently influenced by groom (archaically "servant, man").

^ But not virus

^ These reflexes are suggested by Belarusian scholar Siarhiej Sanko. [50]

^ See also Thr goni "woman". [51]

^ See also Phry knaiko , knaikan "woman". [52]

^ Joseph Vendryes had suggested that compound names with the stem seem to be common around the southeast and the Balkans. [61] However, the stem "is attested ... in Messapic , in Osco-Umbrian , in Venetic , in Gaulish , in Celtiberian , in Brittonic languages , in Welsh , in German and in the Baltic languages ", [62] as seen, for instance, in Illyrian Teuta (a Illyrian female ruler); Messapic teuta (community) and Taotor (name of deity); tribal name Teutons .

^ However, Robert Beekes suggests a non-Indo-European, substrate origin for the stem and its reflexes. [63]

^ Woudhuizen lists possible reflexes: Phrygian totos , teutous ; Mycenaean te-u-ta-(ko-ro) . [52] Another reflex appears in Thracian personal name Tautomedes , cited by J. P. Mallory , [66] and Ancient Macedonian (Pelasgian?) general Teutamus . [63]

^ hēm- < *ām- (with h- after hum- "you (pl.)") < *asm- < *n̥sm- .

^ Jump up to: a b OE ēow (acc., dat.) and ēow-ic̣ (acc., with the same -c̣ ending visible in 1st. sg. acc. mēc̣ "me", also modern German mich "me"), likewise Old High German iuwih "you (acc./dat. pl.)" (modern euch ), appear to have the same origin as izw- in Gothic izwis "you (acc./dat. pl)", with unexplained loss of -z- . izwis appears to come from stem izw- plus originally genitive -is , where izw- comes ultimately from PIE *us-we with the loss of u- also visible in Avestan and Celtic, followed by the addition of a prothetic i- . (Ringe, 2006)

^ Cf. Latin ne-que , Gothic ni-h , Hittite ni-kku , Lydian ni-k "and not, nor".

^ All suggested etymologies of një "one" are highly speculative, at best. This etymology is one of two given by E. Hamp in Indo-European Numerals (Jadranka Gvozdanović, ed., 1992), pp. 903-904; the other is simply from PIE *eni- (or H₂en- ) , a PIE deictic particle visible in Sanskrit anyá- "the other", OCS onŭ "that one", Lithuanian anàs "that one". Michiel de Vaan, in a review of Demiraj's Sistemi i numerimit , suggests PIE *H₂en-io-no- > pre-Proto-Albanian *ëńán > Proto-Albanian *ńâ > një . M. Huld ( Basic Albanian Etymologies , p. 101) attempts to derive një from PIE *sm-iH₂ , feminine of *sem "one" and reflected in Ancient Greek mía ; this etymology is also tentatively suggested in Don Ringe et al. "IE and Computational Cladistics", p. 75 ( Transactions of the Philological Society 100, 2002).

^ For example, qñnã-tba "twelve" (litt. "ten" plus "two"). [70]

^ See also: Umb peturpursus "quadruped".

^ Cf. Thr ketri- "four". [73]

^ See also: Osc pomp- "five". [74]

^ See also Phry pinke "five". [52]

^ Built upon osmŭ "eighth" < *H₁ok̂t-mo- .

^ With nasalization after *septḿ̥ "seven".

^ There is the possibility that Lycian sñta could mean either "ten" or "(one) hundred". [75] [78]

^ But not kephalḗ !

^ Possible Anatolian reflex of the root, as posited by Sasseville (2020). [106]

^ Only in *aíƕatundi "bramble", literally "horse-tooth".

^ Expected form is *vōs , not *bōs ; evidently this is a borrowing from Oscan or Umbrian .

^ bóu, báu are archaic genitives; later báo, bó .

^ Celtic river-goddess

^ In the latter case, a direct parallel to Skt. go·vinda- "cow-finder"

^ River in Ireland

^ Proposed by Yakubovich and Sasseville (2018). [120]

^ Cf. also Phry ἔξις or ἔζις ( ezi ) "hedgehog".

^ In ancient Roman tradition, the Avernus was a lake where birds died as they flew near it.

^ See also Illyrian tribal name Enchele "eel-people".

^ The name migrated to Eastern Europe, [146] assumed the form "azhdaja" and the meaning "dragon", "dragoness" [147] or "water snake" [148] in Balkanic and Slavic languages. [149]

^ See also Ovinnik 'a spirit of the barn'. [188]

^ Jump up to: a b Lit. drinking implement

^ Via French né, née

^ Cf. Sanskrit janitár- , Greek genetḗr, genétōr , Latin genitor "procreator".

^ Seen in many personal or tribal names: Biuitoni , Biuonia , Dago-bius , etc

^ This borrowing is found in almost every Slavic language and is said to be "without doubt the most famous Germanic loanword in Slavic" (Pronk-Tiethoff (2013))

^ Derived by some from *men- "to think"

^ standard present tense formed using a suppletive root

^ all Slavic languages

^ Under the misguided influence of Greek stûlos "pillar"

^ Cf. Asteria (litt.) "starry one"; Astraeus "god of dusk" (litt. "starry"); Astraea "star-maiden"; Cretan king Asterion "starry".

^ acc. stā̆rǝm , gen. stārō , pl. nom. staras-ča, stārō , acc. strǝ̄uš , gen. strǝ̄m , dat. stǝrǝbyō .

^ Tīw < *deiwos was the Germanic god of war, but originally was a sky-god and head of the gods, like Zeus.

^ *deiwos > Lat. deus; gen. *deiwī > Lat. dīvī . From each stem a full declension was formed.

^ According to linguist Vitaly Shevoroshkin , the noun exists in other Anatolian languages : Lycian ziw- ; Lydian civ- ; Luwian Tiwa- ; Palaic Tija- . [119]

^ Other dialectal variants are Cretan awélios or ābélios ; Doric āélios .

^ Seen in chamomile (from khamaimēlon "earth-apple") and chameleon (from khamailéōn "earth-lion"). [186]

^ Jump up to: a b c d It is unclear how the original PIE forms produced the attested daughter-language forms. After the loss of laryngeals, original *péH₂wr̥, pH₂unés would regularly produce *pāwr̥, punés . It is possible that this form was considered too strange-looking, with the result that the u vowel was borrowed from the second stem into the first, yielding *púwr̥, punés . This compressed to *pūr, punés , and this stem set, or its regularized version *pūr, purés , might form the basis of the Umbrian, Greek and Armenian forms.

For Germanic, however, something else must be at work. Ringe (2006) suggests that the following sequence of events produced Gothic fōn : Collective péH₂wōr -> pH₂uṓr (cf. Tocharian B puwar ) > puōr > Proto-Germanic fuwōr > fwōr > fōr -> fōn (using -n- from the oblique stem), where -> indicates a change due to analogy, while > indicates a regular sound change. His explanation of funins and fuïr is very tentative and complicated. Pokorny's suggestion for Germanic is rather different. He derives fōn from *fwōn , with no further derivation, but probably different from Ringe's. fuïr comes from *puweri , a locative that could be formed from a nominative *púwr̥ or possibly from a stem *pur- . It suffices to say that the processes involved are not well understood.

^ Februārius mēnsis - Roman month of expiation

^ Cf. Thracian river name Struma and river-god Strymon ; Illyrian toponyms Stravianae and Strevintia ; Lith. (dial.) river name Straujà ; Old Prussian place-names Strewe , Stromyke and Strowange . [292] Stravianae (or Stravijanu) is tentatively located by scholars near the modern day city of Našice , in east Croatia . [293]

^ The literal meaning is "place between the rivers".

^ Scholarly opinion seems to agree that the word must have referred to a large body of water.

^ Replaced OE sār , compare Ger sehr

^ Jump up to: a b *H₁le(n)gʷʰ- and *H₁reudʰ- are both roots that form Caland-type adjectives. These roots are notable in that they form zero-stem adjectives with certain characteristic suffixes, especially -ro- and -u- , along with -i- in compounds. Other examples are *H₂erĝ- "white" (cf. Greek argós < *argrós "white", Sanskrit ṛjrá- "brilliant", Tocharian B ārkwi "white", Greek argi-kéraunos "with bright lightning") and *dʰeub- "deep" (cf. Lithuanian dubùs "hollow" < *dʰub-u- , Tocharian B tapre "high" < *dhub-ro- ).

^ contested

^ Cf. also Thrac arzas "white". [324]

^ Etymon rudá appears in idiomatic expressions denoting "anger". [334]

^ Latin etymons galbus ("yellow") and galbinus ("greenish-yellow") are also suggested to derive from this root. [340]

^ See also: Phr glouros "gold". [341] [342]

^ Not cognate

^ ibetis uciu andecari biiete - 'drink from here and be nice' - Limé (Aisne) inscrpition

^ See also Umbrian benust (Latin uenerit ) and Oscan kúm-bened (Latin conuentio ).

^ Now compare 'prose' and 'verse'

^ wagon is a loan-word from Dutch.

^ Some of these words might instead derive from *sekʷ- "to follow"

^ Not related to Spanish alquilar

^ Probably

^ See also Hesperus "evening star"; Hesperides "daughters of the evening; nymphs of the west".

^ Attested in the Coligny calendar , written in Gaulish language .

^ Douglas Q. Adams reads the words as "winter, wintry", although there are other interpretations. [453] [454]

^ Influenced by zǝrǝd "heart".

^ Range of meanings across the different Slavic languages

^ as in 'to boot', 'bootless'

^ exact cognate of Héktōr




^ Dnghu, pp. 1993-1994.

^ Pokorny, pp. 700-701.

^ Jump up to: a b Dnghu, p. 2394.

^ Jump up to: a b Pokorny, p. 829.

^ Jump up to: a b Mallory & Adams (2006), p. 210.

^ Dnghu, pp. 485-486.

^ Pokorny, pp. 163-164.

^ Jump up to: a b Mallory & Adams (2006), p. 214.

^ Yūsuke, Sumi (2018). New Express Romani (Gypsy) . p. 142.

^ Kenrick, Donald (2007). Historical Dictionary of the Gypsies . pp. 195, 204. ISBN 978-0-8108-5468-0 .

^ Zair, Nicholas (2012). The Reflexes of the Proto-Indo-European Laryngeals in Celtic . Brill. p. 110. doi : 10.1163/9789004233096 . ISBN 978-90-04-22539-8 .

^ Campbell, George L. with King, Gareth. Compendium of the World's Languages . Routledge. 2013. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-415-62191-5

^ Dnghu, p. 3027.

^ Pokorny, p. 1051.

^ Witczak, Krzysztof Tomasz (1 December 2015). "Gaulish SUIOREBE 'with two sisters' " . Lingua Posnaniensis . 57 (2): 59–62. doi : 10.1515/linpo-2015-0011 . S2CID 56122374 .

^ Kloekhorst, Alwin (2011). "The accentuation of the PIE word for 'daughter' ". Accent Matters . pp. 235–243. doi : 10.1163/9789401200325_009 . ISBN 978-90-420-3332-0 .

^ Dnghu, pp. 757-758.

^ Pokorny, p. 277.

^ Mallory & Adams (2006), p. 213.

^ García, Carlos Varias. " De synonymia Mycenaea : términos griegos equivalentes de distintos reinos micénicos". In: Conuentus Classicorum: temas y formas del Mundo Clásico . Coord. por Jesús de la Villa, Emma Falque Rey, José Francisco González Castro, María José Muñoz Jiménez, Vol. 1, 2017. pp. 382-383. ISBN 978-84-697-8214-9

^ García, Carlos Varias. " De synonymia Mycenaea : términos griegos equivalentes de distintos reinos micénicos". In: Conuentus Classicorum: temas y formas del Mundo Clásico . Coord. por Jesús de la Villa, Emma Falque Rey, José Francisco González Castro, María José Muñoz Jiménez, Vol. 1, 2017. p. 388. ISBN 978-84-697-8214-9

^ Jump up to: a b Bernardo Stempel, Patrizia de (January 2013). "Celtic 'son', 'daughter', other descendants, and *sunus in Early Celtic". Indogermanische Forschungen . 118 (2013). doi : 10.1515/indo.2013.118.2013.259 . S2CID 199664295 .

^ Stifter, David (2006). "Contributions to Celtiberian Etymology II" . Palaeohispanica. Revista sobre lenguas y culturas de la Hispania Antigua (6): 237–245.

^ Oshiro, Terumasa (1990). "On Kinship Terms in Hieroglyphic Luwian". Orient . 26 : 86–93. doi : 10.5356/orient1960.26.86 . S2CID 162342792 . INIST : 6146291 .

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