kunjam
Schlagen Sie auch in anderen Wörterbüchern nach:
Mennonite Church in India — (Bharatiya Mennonite Church in India ki Pratinidhi Sabha) is a Mennonite denomination of India. The number of its members is about 3,500. It has 19 congregations. Its bishop has his seat at the town of Dhamtari in Chhattisgarh. It is part of the… … Wikipedia
Gothic language — Infobox Language name=Gothic region=Oium, Dacia, Italy, Gallia Narbonensis, Hispania. extinct=mostly extinct by the 8th century, remnants may have lingered into the 17th century familycolor=Indo European fam2=Germanic fam3=East Germanic… … Wikipedia
Cheraman Perumal — Part of a series on the Chera dynasty Kings · Uthiyan Chera … Wikipedia
Gotische Grammatik — Die Grammatik der gotischen Sprache ist die älteste so gut wie vollständig bezeugte Grammatik einer germanischen Einzelsprache, dazu noch die einzige Grammatik aus dem ostgermanischen Sprachzweig. Sie ist hauptsächlich aus der Wulfilabibel… … Deutsch Wikipedia
genə- — Also gen . To give birth, beget; with derivatives referring to aspects and results of procreation and to familial and tribal groups. Oldest form *g̑enə₁ , becoming *genə₁ in centum languages. Derivatives include kin, king, jaunty, genius,… … Universalium
Kulasekhara dynasty (Second Cheras) — For the King and Vaishnava Saint, see Kulashekhara Alwar. For the Tamil sangam dynasty of Cheras, see Chera Dynasty. For the Venad Kulasekhara dynasty based on Kollam, see Venad. Mahodayapuram Chera Kingdom or Kulasekhara kingdom … Wikipedia
kúnjati — (∅) nesvrš. 〈prez. kȗnjām, pril. sad. ajūći, gl. im. ānje〉 1. {{001f}}predavati se polusnu, opuštati se do stanja laganog drijemeža; drijemati 2. {{001f}}lagano pobolijevati … Veliki rječnik hrvatskoga jezika
kin — [OE] Kin is the central English member of the Germanic branch of a vast family of words that trace their ancestry back to the prehistoric Indo European base *gen , *gon , *gn , denoting ‘produce’ (the Latin branch has given English gender,… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
kind — [OE] Kind the noun and kind the adjective are ultimately the same word, but they split apart in pre historic times. Their common source was Germanic *kunjam, the ancestor of English kin. From it, using the collective prefix *ga and the abstract… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
king — [OE] The prehistoric Germanic ancestor of king (as of German könig, Dutch koning, Swedish konung, and Danish konge) was *kuninggaz. This seems to have been a derivative of *kunjam ‘race, people’ (source of English kin). If it was, king means… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins