Etymology of the English word conjugant
the English word
conjugantderived from the English word
conjugatederived from the Latin word
coniugatus (etymologically connected, related; depending on etymological connection)
derived from the Latin word
coniugare (join in marriage; form a friendship; join together)
using the Latin prefix
con- (together)
derived from the Latin prefix
com-derived from the Latin word
cum (with)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root
*kom (near, with, together)
derived from the Latin word
iugare (marry; join)
derived from the Latin word
iugum (yoke; team, pair)
derived from the Latin word
iungere (to join; join, unite; bring together)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root
*yeug-derived from the Latin word
jugumusing the English suffix
-antderived from the Latin word
coniugansderived from the Latin word
coniugare (join in marriage; form a friendship; join together)
using the Latin prefix
con- (together)
derived from the Latin prefix
com-derived from the Latin word
cum (with)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root
*kom (near, with, together)
derived from the Latin word
iugare (marry; join)
derived from the Latin word
iugum (yoke; team, pair)
derived from the Latin word
iungere (to join; join, unite; bring together)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root
*yeug-derived from the Latin word
jugumUsage
Word found in Modern English