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etymon Meaning in Bengali



 মূলশব্দ যাহা হইতে অন্যান্য শব্দ নিষ্পন্ন হয়,

একটি সহজ ফর্ম সাধারণ ভিত্তি হিসেবে অনুমিত যা থেকে অনেকগুলি ভাষায় সম্পর্কিত শব্দ ভাষাগত প্রক্রিয়ার মাধ্যমে আহরিত হতে পারে

Noun:

মূলশব্দ যাহা হইতে অন্যান্য শব্দ নিষ্পন্ন হয়,





etymon শব্দের বাংলা অর্থ এর উদাহরণ:

ফিনিশ ভাষাতত্ত্ববিদ জুহাকে জানহুনেন সম্ভবত একটি মূলশব্দ যাহা হইতে অন্যান্য শব্দ নিষ্পন্ন হয় যেমন *kalimV পুনর্নির্মিত তুলনা ইউনিকর্ন পেগাসাস "qilin ।

etymon's Usage Examples:

The term etymon refers to a word or morpheme (e.


The name Assuwa may have been the etymon for the Ancient Greek Asia (Ἀσία).


compassion, condolence or empathy - the word deriving from the Latin pietās (etymon also of piety).


Welsh mythological figure Modron, mother of Mabon is derived from the same etymon.


the Molung Khola, Likhu Khola and Khimti Khola (‘Khola’ Indo-Aryan Nepali etymon ‘rivulet’) regions.


beginning of the 19th century, from the German Mordent and its Italian etymon, mordente, both used in the 18th century to describe this musical figure.


(Hindu), which is itself derived from the Proto-Indo-Iranian *síndʰuš, the etymon also of Sanskrit Sindhu, the native name of the Indus River.


Synaxarium, that there is no evidence of the use of the supposed Coptic etymon in historical sources, and that a Persian etymology sufficiently explains.


compared to the "triad" above, just the middle will etymon has been replaced by the work etymon.


"Etyma" is also the plural of "etymon" Etyma is a genus of longhorn beetles of the subfamily Lamiinae, containing the following species: Etyma curu Galileo.


Some writers connect it to modern Italian lasagne, of which it is the etymon, but most authors deny that it was pasta.


nomothetēs νομοθέτης "lawgiver", from νόμος "law" and the Proto-Indo-European etymon nem- meaning to "take, give, account, apportion")), e.


Modern lexicographers have proposed an unattested Old South Arabian etymon for the plural tawārīkh, "datings", from the Semitic root for "moon, month".


Old High German driscubli stands especially close to the sought-after etymon.


The term stems from the classical Latin or its ancient Greek etymon Pharos, meaning lighthouse (Pharos was also the proper name of the famed.


Campaniacum is the etymon inferred from numerous toponyms in France.


"It is with the etymon of Vinovia that I would identify the stem of the prototheme in Vinov-i-loth.



etymon's Meaning':

a simple form inferred as the common basis from which related words in several languages can be derived by linguistic processes

Synonyms:

word form; descriptor; root; form; signifier;

Antonyms:

singular; plural; descendant; destabilise; destabilize;

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