extenuating
English
verb form
Etymology
Derived from Latin ex (out of, from, out, thoroughly, out from, without, delete, cross out, throughout, away) derived from Middle English -ing (gerund ending, blossom, nominalising ending, present participle ending) affix from English tenuate.
Origin
English
tenuate
Gloss
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- -ing English
- astonish English
- ex contractu English
- ex delicto English
- ex- English
- ex-directory English
- exolete English
- extenuatingly English
- exthorio English
- tenuate English
- *exaurare Latin
- *excadeo, *excadēre, *excadeō Latin
- *excadō Latin
- *excambiāre Latin
- *excambiō Latin
- *excampare Latin
- *excoāctiāre Latin
- *exfortiō Latin
- *exlītigāre Latin
- *expingere Latin
- *extaliō Latin
- *extroculāre Latin
- *exvellere Latin
- *exwardare Latin
- bis Latin
- cambiō Latin
- deex Latin
- ecce Latin
- ex Latin
- exaurare Latin
- excommūnicāre Latin
- excurare Latin
- exeligere Latin
- exinanio Latin
- exiuro Latin
- exos Latin
- expeiuro Latin
- sapio Latin
- wardare Latin
- ciarlare Italian
- esecutore Italian
- scipito Italian
- éployer French
- экспромт Russian
- ex- Spanish, Castilian
- expectorar Spanish, Castilian
- αὔρα Ancient Greek
- ἐκ Ancient Greek
- *eǵ- Proto-Indo-European
- -ing Old English
- -ing Middle English
- esventail Old French
- res- Old French
- el Esperanto
- eks Serbo-Croatian
- екс Serbo-Croatian
- es- Catalan, Valencian
- esdevenir Catalan, Valencian
- ex Old Portuguese
- sbintari Sicilian
- scassari Sicilian
- scìpitu Sicilian
- spillonga Sicilian
- sputtusari Sicilian