"
my etymology.com

Etymology of the Latin word unus

the Latin word unus (one; alone, a single, sole)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *oi-no-

Derivations in Latin

unanimus, unire, unitas, unicus, unio, adunare, undecim, uni-, uncia, uniaristata, unifaria, unifolia, unilineatum, uninervia, uninodis, uniplumis, uniramosa, unispiculata, aliquunus

Derivations in other languages

English unipennate, English uni-, English uub, French un, Portuguese um, Portuguese uno, Romanian un, Spanish uno, Spanish unicaule, Spanish unifoliado, Spanish unipersonal, Spanish unisexual, Spanish unisonancia, Spanish unimembre

Cognates

Catalan dors, Catalan hom, Danish en, Dutch één, Dutch emmer, Dutch een, English cry, English one, French défiler, French chandeleur, French crier, French deviser, French dos, French on, French un, German ein, German Eimer, Gothic ains, Icelandic einn, Italian dorso, Italian gridare, Italian uno, Italian huom, Latin dorsum, Lithuanian defiliuoti, Norwegian ambar, Nynorsk enn, Portuguese dorso, Portuguese gritar, Portuguese ome, Provençal et_anc, Provençal uns, Riksmal en, Russian дeфилировать, Spanish cridar, Spanish dorso, Spanish un, Spanish desfilar, Spanish devisar, Spanish omne, Spanish candelor, Swedish en, Swedish ämbar, Yiddish ejn

Usage

Word found in Late Latin, Classical Latin


Comments

No comments yet

Post a comment

*Name:
Email:
*Text:

Completeness rating

71 out of 100

Share and enjoy


© 2008 myetymology.com - etymologia