Meaning
Cognate can be used both as a noun and an adjective:
- Adjective: Describes words, languages, or things that share the same origin or are related.
- Noun: Refers to a word that has the same origin as another word in a different language.
Grammar and Usage
-
As an adjective:
- "cognate with" → related to or having the same origin as.
- Example: "Spanish is cognate with Italian."
-
As a noun:
- Refers to a specific word with shared linguistic ancestry.
- Example: "The English word 'mother' is a cognate of the German word 'Mutter'."
Common Phrases
- cognate languages
- cognate words
- cognate roots
Collocations
- noun + cognate: language cognate, word cognate
- adjective + cognate: closely cognate, linguistically cognate
- verb + cognate: identify cognates, compare cognates
Examples
- The English word night and the German word Nacht are cognates.
- Spanish and Portuguese are cognate languages with many similarities.
- The teacher explained that frater in Latin is cognate with brother in English.
- Linguists often study cognate words to trace the history of languages.
- Many English and French words are cognate because of Latin influence.
- The student learned to recognize cognates when studying Italian.
- The term "astronomy" in English is cognate with similar words in many European languages.
- English hundred is cognate with Latin centum.
Synonyms or Related
- related
- akin
- comparable
- parallel
- derivative (in some contexts)