cognato
Italian
Etymology
From Latin cognātus (“related by blood”), from cum (“with”) + nātus (“born”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [koˈɲɲaː.t̪o]
- Hyphenation: co‧gna‧to
Noun
cognato m (plural cognati)
Related terms
Anagrams
Latin
Adjective
cognātō
- dative masculine singular of cognātus
- dative neuter singular of cognātus
- ablative masculine singular of cognātus
- ablative neuter plural of cognātus
Portuguese
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin cognātus (“related by blood”), from cum (“with”) + nātus (“born”). Compare the inherited Portuguese doublet cunhado.
Pronunciation
- (Brazil) IPA(key): /koɡ.ˈna.tu/
- Hyphenation: cog‧na‧to
Noun
cognato m (plural cognatos)
- (linguistics) cognate (a word that is etymologically related to another)
Adjective
cognato m (feminine singular cognata, masculine plural cognatos, feminine plural cognatas, comparable)
- (linguistics) being a cognate
- (of a relative) related by blood
Antonyms
- (related by blood): afim
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