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Etymology of the French word carminatif

the Old French word carminatif
derived from the Latin word carminatus
derived from the Late Latin word carminare (card; produce by carding; make verses)
derived from the Late Latin word carmen (card for wool, flax; song, music; poem)
derived from the Latin word canere (be, become covered in white; be hoary; sing, celebrate, chant)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *kan-
derived from the Latin word carere (be without, absent from, devoid of; card, comb)
derived from the Medieval Latin word carminativus
derived from the Late Latin word carminare (card; produce by carding; make verses)
derived from the Late Latin word carmen (card for wool, flax; song, music; poem)
derived from the Latin word canere (be, become covered in white; be hoary; sing, celebrate, chant)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *kan-
derived from the Latin word carere (be without, absent from, devoid of; card, comb)

Date

The earliest known usage of carminatif in French dates from the 15th century.

Derivations in other languages

English carminative, Romanian carminativ

Usage

Word found in Old French



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