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Etymology of the French word cavitation

the French word cavitation
derived from the English word cavitation
using the English suffix -ation
derived from the Latin suffix -atio
derived from the Latin suffix -are
derived from the French suffix -ation
using the Latin prefix -ation-
derived from the English word cavity
derived from the French word cavite
derived from the Latin word cavitas
derived from the Latin word cavus (hollow or cave; hole, cavity, depression; hollow, excavated, hollowed out; sunken; deep, having deep channel)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *keuə-
derived from the French word cavité
derived from the Latin word cavitas
derived from the Latin word cavus (hollow or cave; hole, cavity, depression; hollow, excavated, hollowed out; sunken; deep, having deep channel)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *keuə-
derived from the French word cavity
derived from the Latin word cavitas
derived from the Latin word cavus (hollow or cave; hole, cavity, depression; hollow, excavated, hollowed out; sunken; deep, having deep channel)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *keuə-
derived from the Latin word cavitas
derived from the Latin word cavus (hollow or cave; hole, cavity, depression; hollow, excavated, hollowed out; sunken; deep, having deep channel)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *keuə-

Date

The earliest known usage of cavitation in French dates from the 20th century.

Derivations in other languages

Romanian cavitaţie, Spanish cavitación



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