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pannous edited this page Jul 19, 2023 · 61 revisions

kin

com ๐“ƒน ๐“ˆ–

๐“Ž›๐“ˆ–๐“‚ #hna แธซna ฮพฯฮฝ hand > and (๐“‚๐“‚โ‡”๐“‚ž) ๐ƒ๐Žญ๐Ž  h-d-a /hadฤ/ with

con < given in ๐’‚ต๐’• ga-da gada #qadum โˆšgift "with"

๐’‚  แธชUฤœ /hung/ โ‰ˆ con @ Hindi

โฒฅโฒŸโฒ›ฯฉโณผ โ†” โฒฅโฒฑโฒ›ฯฉ to bind
ฯซโฒ“โฒ›โฒฅโฒฑโฒ›ฯฉ m. binding
โฒ™โฒโฒ›โฒฅโฒฑโฒ›ฯฉ m. place of binding, prison

๐“Žธ #แบ–n con โ€˜uniteโ€™
con ๐“Ž› ๐“ˆ– ๐“‚ and, with
๐“Ž› ๐“ˆ– ๐“‚ hannu@Hausa => Hand

๐’ƒถ แธชร‰ / GAN / KAM

๐’Œบ UKKIN conโ€ฆ "assembly" (of kin, brothers ๐’Œบ โ‰ˆ ๐’Œท๐’‡ uru.bar )

con ฮบฮนฮฝฮญฯ‰ kinรฉล gather ?

From Proto-Indo-European *key-d-, a dental extension of the root Proto-Indo-European *key- (โ€œto move, to impelโ€). Cognate with Ancient Greek ฮบฮนฮฝฮญฯ‰ (kinรฉล, โ€œto set in motion, to arouseโ€), Latin cieล (โ€œto set in motion, to summonโ€), Sanskrit เคšเฅเคฏเคตเคคเฅ‡ (cyavate, โ€œto come forth, to fall downโ€), Albanian qoj (โ€œto wake upโ€). Perhaps the original notion was "to summon", i.e. "to order someone to come" (cf. the parallel usage of English cite (โ€œto summon (someone)โ€), from the cognate Latin root).

๐œฅ๐œŽ‚ zana ลพanรก ะถะฐะฝะฐฬ ะทะฐะฝ@Tajik gyne san ๐“Šƒ ๐“ ๐“ zant ะถะฐะฝั‡ั‹ฬะฝะฐ ลพanฤรฝna Jeanne Jana โ‡” ะถะฐาฃะฐ "new" "and"

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