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Etymology of the Latin word concisus

the Latin word concisus (cut up, off; broken)
derived from the Latin word concidere (cut, chop up, down; fall down, faint, dead; perish, be slain, sacrificed)
derived from the Late Latin word caedere (chop, hew, cut out)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *kaə-id-
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 cidere

Derivations in Latin

concisio

Derivations in other languages

English concise, French concis, Italian conciso, Portuguese conciso, Spanish conciso

Cognates

English concise, French concis, German konzis, Italian conciso, Norwegian konsis, Spanish conciso, Swedish koncis



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