![]() |
|
| Read about the most recent changes and happenings at Amazines.com |
| Log into your account or register as a new author. Start submitting your articles right now! |
| Search our database for articles. |
| Subscribe to receive articles emailed straight to your email account. You may choose multiple categories. |
| View our newest articles submitted by our authors. |
| View our most top rated articles rated by our visitors. |
| * Please note that this is NOT the ARTICLE manager Add a new EZINE, or manage your EZINE submission. |
| Add fresh, free web content to your site such as newest articles, web tools, and quotes with a single piece of code! |
![]() |
|
An example of cognates within the same language would be English shirt and skirt, the former from Old English&_160;scyrte, the latter loaned from Old Norse skyrta, both from the same Common Germanic *skurtjon-. Words with this type of relationship within a single language are called doublets. Further cognates of the same word in other Germanic languages would include German Schürze and Dutch schort "apron". The word cognate derives from Latin cognatus "blood relative".[1] Cognates need not have the same meaning dish (English) and Tisch ("table", German) and desco ("table", medieval Italian), or starve (English) and sterben ("die", German), or head (English) and chef ("chief, head", French), serve as examples as to how cognate terms may diverge in meaning as languages develop separately, eventually becoming false friends.
|
ADVERTISE HERE NOW!
|
|
Home
|
Links
|
About Us
|
Contact Us
|
Privacy Policy
|
FAQ
|
Resources
Copyright © 2009, All rights reserved. Some pages may contain portions of text relating to certain topics obtained from wikipedia.org under the GNU FDL license |
![]() |