cousin

Bedeutung (Englisch)

Konzepte

entfernte Verwandte

entfernter Verwandter

Kusin

Cousin ersten Grades

Vetter Cousine

älterer Cousin

älterer Vetter

ältere Cousine

ältere Base

jüngerer Cousin

jüngerer Vetter

jüngere Cousine

Frequenz

B1
Mit Bindestrich als
cou‧sin
Ausgesprochen als (IPA)
/ˈkʌzn̩/
Etymologie (Englisch)

In summary

The noun is derived from Middle English cosin, cosine, cosyn (“blood relative, kinsman or kinswoman; any relative; nephew or niece; first cousin; grandson or granddaughter; descendant; godchild or godparent, or a relative of a godchild or godparent; (figurative) closely related or similar thing”) [and other forms], and then: * from Anglo-Norman cosen, cosin [and other forms], Middle French cosin, and Old French cosin (“collateral male relative more distant than one’s brother; form of address used by a monarch to male monarchs or nobles”) [and other forms] (modern French cousin); and * from Anglo-Norman cosine, Middle French cosine, and Old French cosine (“collateral female relative more distant than one’s sister; form of address used by a monarch to female monarchs or nobles”) [and other forms] (modern French cousine), from Latin cōnsōbrīnus (“maternal cousin; first cousin; relation”) (possibly through Vulgar Latin *cōsuīnus, from *cōsōbīnus), from con- (prefix denoting a bringing together of several objects) + sobrīnus (“maternal cousin; sister’s son; any nephew”) (from a noun use of Proto-Italic *swezrīnos (“of or belonging to a sister”, adjective) (with the first syllable influenced by Latin soror (“sister”)), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *swésōr (“sister”), possibly from *swé (“self”) + *h₁ésh₂r̥ (“blood”) (that is, a woman of one’s own blood) or *-sōr (feminine suffix)). The verb is derived from the noun.

Lesezeichen

Verbessern Sie Ihre Aussprache

Englisch

Beginnen Sie mit dem Lernen Englisch mit learnfeliz .

Üben Sie das Sprechen und Auswendiglernen von " cousin " und vieler anderer Wörter und Sätze in Englisch .

Gehen Sie zu unserer Englisch Kursseite

Notes

Sign in to write sticky notes
Weitermachen