"
my etymology.com

Etymology of the Latin word currere

the Medieval Latin word currere (run, trot, gallop)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *kers-

Derivations in Latin

incurrare, recurrere, currus, cursus, currens, adcurrere, antecurrere, circumcurrere, excurrere, intercurrere, percurrere, procurrere, transcurrere, praecurrere, discurrere, concurrere, decurrere, incurrere, accurrere, occurrere, succurrere, cursivus, cursum, intercursus, Cursorius, cursor

Derivations in other languages

French courre, Italian correre, Portuguese correr, Romanian curge

Cognates

Dutch kroon, Dutch luster, Dutch organiseren, Dutch trompet, English corona, English crown, English lustre, English trumpet, English organize, French ordinal, French organiser, French parvenir, French courir, French couronne, French mûrir, French terrible, French trompette, French sonneur, German Korona, German Krone, German Kronleuchter, German Lüster, German organisieren, German Trompete, Icelandic kóróna, Icelandic ljósa-króna, Italian corona, Italian correre, Italian maturare, Italian organizzare, Italian pervenire, Italian terribile, Lithuanian organizuoti, Norwegian krone, Norwegian lysekrone, Norwegian organisere, Norwegian trompet, Polish organizować, Portuguese trombeta, Portuguese coroa, Portuguese terrivel, Russian организовать, Spanish trompeta, Spanish corona, Swedish korona, Swedish krona, Swedish ljuskrona, Swedish lyster, Swedish organisera, Swedish trumpet, Yiddish krojn

Usage

Word found in Medieval Latin



© 2008 myetymology.com - etymologia
Dapyx Software: MP3 Explorer | Ebook Manager | Zenithic