ciconia

See also: Ciconia

Latin

cicōnia (a stork)

Etymology

From Proto-Indo-European *kekoh₂n- (stork), a reduplicated derivative of Proto-Indo-European *keh₂n- (to sing), whence also Latin canō (to sing). Cognate to Proto-Germanic *hanô (rooster, cock), Proto-Germanic *hanjō (hen) (whence English hen), Proto-Slavic *kaňa (accipitrid) (whence Russian каню́к (kanjúk, buzzard), Bulgarian ка́ня (kánja, kite), Bulgarian каню́ша (kanjúša, stork) (dialectal)).

Pronunciation

Noun

cicōnia f (genitive cicōniae); first declension

  1. stork
  2. a derisive gesture made with the fingers
  3. a T-shaped instrument used to measure depth of furrows
  4. a transverse pole, mounted on a post, for drawing water

Declension

First-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative cicōnia cicōniae
Genitive cicōniae cicōniārum
Dative cicōniae cicōniīs
Accusative cicōniam cicōniās
Ablative cicōniā cicōniīs
Vocative cicōnia cicōniae

Derived terms

  • cicōnīnus

Descendants

  • Asturian: cigüeña
  • Catalan: cigonya
  • Old French: ceoigne, çoigne
    • French: ceogne, çogne (dialectal, Brie)
  • Galician: cegoña
  • Italian: cicogna
  • Occitan: cigonha
  • Portuguese: cegonha
  • Romansch: cicogna
  • Sardinian:
Campidanese: cicònnia, cicogna, tzicònnia
Gallurese: cicona, cicogna
Logudorese: cicònia, cicogna, tzicònnia
Nuorese: tzicogna, ciconna, tziconna
Sassarese: cicogna

References

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.