Esperanto

edit

Etymology

edit

From Ancient Greek ἐκ (ek).[1]

Pronunciation

edit
  • IPA(key): [ek]
  • Audio:(file)
  • Hyphenation: ek

Prefix

edit

ek-

  1. The prefix ek- indicates that the action it modifies is momentary or just beginning. It marks the inceptive aspect of verbs.
    ek- + ‎krii (to cry) → ‎ekkrii (to cry out)
    ek- + ‎kanti (to sing) → ‎ekkanti (to begin to sing)

Derived terms

edit
  • ek (let's go)
  • eki (to begin, to start)
  • eko (beginning, start)

References

edit
  1. ^ André Cherpillod, Konciza Etimologia Vortaro, 2007

Etymology

edit

Prefix form of ek (out of (motion from; made or extracted from; fractional part of), out from, out (forth from), of (made of)).

Prefix

edit

ek-

  1. prefix indicating out, out from
    ek- + ‎irar (to go) → ‎ekirar (to go out; exit)

Derived terms

edit

Northern Ohlone

edit

Etymology

edit

Compare Southern Ohlone -ka.

Pronoun

edit

ek-

  1. I (first-person, singular, proclitic subject pronoun)
    • 1921, María de los Angeles Colós, José Guzman, and John Peabody Harrington, Chochenyo Field Notes[1]:
      ek-jawwasin
      I will wait [for it]

Determiner

edit

ek-

  1. my (first-person, singular, possessive)
    • 1921, María de los Angeles Colós, José Guzman, and John Peabody Harrington, Chochenyo Field Notes[2]:
      kiš kaayi ek-mootil
      My head is hurting me

See also

edit
Northern Ohlone personal pronouns
person subject object possessive
disjunctive1 proclitic
enclitic disjunctive1 proclitic enclitic
singular first kaana ek- -ek, -k kiš, kaaniš kiš- -kiš ek-, kaanak
second meene em-, im- -em, -im, -m miš emiš-, imiš-, miš- -miš em-, meenem
third waaka Ø-2 2 wiš Ø-2, eš- 2, -eš i-, waakai-
plural first makkin mak- -mak makkiš, makkinše mak-, makkinmak
second makkam kam- -kam makkamše kam-, makkam
third waakamak ya- -ya yaṭiš ya-, waakamak

1 Disjunctive is mostly used in copular sentences or for emphasis, either alone (eg. kaana) or with a clitic (eg. kaana-k ...-ek).
2 Null morpheme. An unmarked verb implies a third person singular pronoun. The disjunctives waaka and wiš may also be used.
Note: Proclitic and enclitic forms can combine and undergo syncope, eg. ellešk (let me do to him/her/it) = elle +‎ -eš +‎ -ek

References

edit
  • María de los Angeles Colós, José Guzman, and John Peabody Harrington (1930s) Chochenyo Field Notes (Survey of California and Other Indian Langauges)‎[3], Unpublished
pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy