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Cognate
Words inherited by different languages
Words inherited by different languages
In historical linguistics, cognates or lexical cognates are sets of words that have been inherited in direct descent from an etymological ancestor in a common parent language.
Because language change can have radical effects on both the sound and the meaning of a word, cognates may not be obvious, and it often takes rigorous study of historical sources and the application of the comparative method to establish whether lexemes are cognate. It can also happen that words which appear similar, or identical, in different languages, are not cognate.
Cognates are distinguished from loanwords, where a word has been borrowed from another language.
Origin
Name
The English term cognate derives from Latin , meaning "blood relative".
Examples
For an example, cognates with the English word night can be found in most major Indo-European languages, including German Nacht, Swedish natt, Polish noc, Russian ночь , Lithuanian naktis, Welsh nos, Greek νύχτα , Sanskrit नक्त , Albanian natë, Latin nox (gen. sg. noctis), Italian notte, French nuit, and Portuguese noite. These all mean 'night', and derive from the Proto-Indo-European with the same meaning. The Indo-European languages have hundreds of such cognate sets, though few of them are as neat as this.
The Arabic سلام , the Hebrew שלום , the Assyrian Neo-Aramaic ܫܠܡܐ and Amharic ሰላም 'peace' are cognates, derived from the Proto-Semitic *šalām- 'peace'.
The Paraguayan Guarani panambi, the Eastern Bolivian Guarani panapana, the Cocama and Omagua panama, and the Sirionó ana ana are cognates, derived from the Old Tupi panapana 'butterfly', maintaining their original meaning in these Tupi languages. Brazilian Portuguese panapanã (flock of butterflies in flight) is a borrowing rather than a cognate of the other words.
Characteristics
Cognates need not have the same meaning, as they may have undergone semantic change as the languages developed independently. For example English starve and Dutch 'to die' or German 'to die' all descend from the same Proto-Germanic verb, 'to die'.
Cognates also do not need to look or sound similar: English father, French , and Armenian () all descend directly from Proto-Indo-European ph₂tḗr. An extreme case is Armenian () and English two, which descend from Proto-Indo-European ; the sound change *dw erk in Armenian is regular.
Paradigms of conjugations or declensions, the correspondence of which cannot be generally due to chance, have often been used in cognacy assessment. However, beyond paradigms, morphosyntax is often excluded in the assessment of cognacy between words, mainly because structures are usually seen as more subject to borrowing. Still, very complex, non-trivial morphosyntactic structures can rarely take precedence over phonetic shapes to indicate cognates. For instance, Tangut, the language of the Xixia Empire, and one Horpa language spoken today in Sichuan, Geshiza, both display a verbal alternation indicating tense, obeying the same morphosyntactic collocational restrictions. Even without regular phonetic correspondences between the stems of the two languages, the cognatic structures indicate secondary cognacy for the stems.
False cognates
Main article: False cognate
False cognates are pairs of words that appear to have a common origin, but which in fact do not. For example, Latin habēre and German haben both mean 'to have' and are phonetically similar. However, the words evolved from different Proto-Indo-European (PIE) roots: haben, like English have, comes from PIE 'to grasp', and has the Latin cognate capere 'to seize, grasp, capture'. Habēre, on the other hand, is from PIE *gʰabʰ 'to give, to receive', and hence cognate with English give and German geben.
Likewise, English much and Spanish mucho look similar and have a similar meaning, but are not cognates: much is from Proto-Germanic
Distinctions
Cognates are distinguished from other kinds of relationships.
- Loanwords are words borrowed from one language into another; for example, English beef is borrowed from Old French boef ('ox’). Although they are part of a single etymological stemma, they are not cognates.
- Doublets are pairs of words in the same language which are derived from a single etymon, which may have similar but distinct meanings and uses. Often, one is a loanword and the other is the native form, or they have developed in different dialects and then found themselves together in a modern standard language. For example, Old French boef is cognate with English cow, so English cow and beef are doublets.
- Translations, or semantic equivalents, are words in two different languages that have similar or practically identical meanings. They may be cognate, but usually they are not. For example, the German equivalent of the English word cow is Kuh, which is also cognate, but the French equivalent is vache, which is unrelated.
References
References
- (2011). "A Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics". [[Blackwell Publishing]].
- [http://www.answers.com/topic/cognate "cognate"], ''[[The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language]]'', 4th ed.: "Latin {{lang. la. cognātus: {{lang. la. co-, co- + {{lang. la. gnātus, born, past participle of {{lang. la. nāscī, to be born." Other definitions of the English word include "[r]elated by blood; having a common ancestor" and "[r]elated or analogous in nature, character, or function".
- Hetzron, Robert. (1976-01-01). "Two principles of genetic reconstruction". Lingua.
- Beaudouin, Mathieu. (2024-09-13). "Non-past and past verb stems in Tangut". Language and Linguistics.
- ''[[Lexikon der indogermanischen Verben]]''
- "A quick introduction to language change".
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