Prof.REIDY HERRERA
UDO.MONAGAS
UNIT: II
COGNATES
In
linguistics,
cognates
are
words
that
have a common etymological
origin.In
etymology,
the cognate
category
excludesdoublets
and
loanwords.
The word cognate
derives
from the Latin noun cognatus,
which means "blood relative".
SOME EXAMPLES OF
COGNATES IN ENGLISH AND SPANISH:
English
|
Spanish
|
---|---|
family
|
familia
|
center
|
centro
|
radio
|
radio
|
class
|
clase
|
desert
|
desierto
|
magic
|
magia
|
gorilla
|
gorila
|
False cognates
False
cognates
are
words that people commonly believe are related (have a common
origin), but that linguistic examination reveals are unrelated. For
example, on the basis of superficial similarities, the Latin verb
habēre
and
German haben,
both meaning 'to have', appear to be cognates. However, because of
the way words in the two languages evolved from Proto-Indo-European
(PIE)
roots, they cannot be cognate (see for example Grimm's
law).
German haben,
like English have,
comes from PIE *kh₂pyé-
'to
grasp', and its real cognate in Latin is capere,
'to seize, grasp, capture'. Latin habēre,
on the other hand, is from PIE *gʰabʰ,
'to give, to receive', and hence cognate with English give
and
German geben.
SOME EXAMPLES :
For more information
check these links:
http://www.tutorpal.com/Our_English/indo_european/images/cogw2.gif
EXERCISE ACTIVITY: For practicing this topic please click on following link:
www.englishexercises.org/makeagame/viewgame.asp?id=14492
EXERCISE ACTIVITY: For practicing this topic please click on following link:
www.englishexercises.org/makeagame/viewgame.asp?id=14492