etymonの例文
- But that etymon suffers from a want of documentary evidence at a sufficiently early date.
- The Elvish languages underwent countless revisions in grammar, mostly in etymons for his Elvish vocabulary.
- The name of Welsh mythological figure Modron, mother of Mabon is derived from the same etymon.
- Carr ( 1995 : 13 ) cites Japanese tradition and historical phonology to support the latter etymon.
- Lexicographic Irregular Coral Samuel of London called with a deeper etymon : " Try the Temple Bar ."
- In these cases, he has names separate from the " Dyeus " etymon, either Perkwunos or Taran.
- It's a little bit mangled from the centuries of linguistic evolution, but its etymon should be obvious to you.
- Etymon 5 players and 3 singers . 22 mins . first performed ISCM at ReykjavikGirl in Scena semi-jazz ensemble . 20 mins.
- Some writers connect it to modern Italian lasagne, of which it is the etymon, but most authors deny that it was pasta.
- Yet in the vocabulary of world-weariness, the phrase has surpassed same-o, same-o, so I ran the traps of etymon-hunters in the Phrasedick Brigade.
- In linguistics, the term " etymon " is used to refer to a word or morpheme ( e . g . stem or root ) from which a later word is derived.
- The Utah senator is a devotee of American slang; his 1996 use of hissy fit, meaning " temper tantrum, " stimulated the speculation in this space that the etymon was hysteria.
- Older literature, as well as some older etymological dictionaries, often posit some alleged Eastern Iranian or Celtic source of all Slavic etymons with unclear etymologies, which in reality have very little linguistic support.
- The assumed indigenous American ( Algonquian ) "'fallen timbers'or'overgrown with brush'" has no support without any attested etymons supplied and would not match phonetically in the case of Shawnee.
- Coates speculates further that the "-i-" could have arisen by metathesis of the "-i-" in the last syllable of his own suggested etymon ( see below ).
- In one year he was the only British composer to be selected for the annual International Society for Contemporary Music ( with Etymon ) while having a disc at number one in the Melody Maker charts ( with Exploding Galaxy ).
- Moreover, there are words that used to be closer in spelling to their Latin etymon before the 1993 reform than after; for example " r顄 " " river ", from the Latin " rivus " ( cf.
- Within one generation the etymon, meaning Green Port or Trading Place ( cf Norwich, Harwich Ipswich and Sandwich in England ) of the surname had assumed the distinctly West Indian orthographic format of Greenidge, whilst maintaining a very similar phenomic identity.
- :Though " bug " certainly had more widely applicable etymons, there was a certain time when they begin to be applied specifically to certain kinds of insects ( though I do not know when ), which turned out to be hemipterans.