camiño
Galician
/kaˈmiɲo̝/
noun
Definitions
- path, road
- route, way
Etymology
Inherited from Old Portuguese camỹo inherited from Latin cammīnus (way) derived from Proto-Celtic *kanxsman-, *kengeti derived from Proto-Indo-European *(s)keng- (limp, be crooked, slant, walk lamely).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*(s)keng-
Gloss
limp, be crooked, slant, walk lamely
Concept
Semantic Field
Motion
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- cammīnus Latin
- cammino Italian
- σχάζω Ancient Greek
- *(s)keng- Proto-Indo-European
- *skankijaną Proto-Germanic
- *skankijô Proto-Germanic
- *skankô Proto-Germanic
- aischéim Irish
- ardchéim Irish
- ardchéimeach Irish
- ardchéimiúil Irish
- breischéim Irish
- coiscéim Irish
- céim Irish
- céimí Irish
- forchéim Irish
- chemin Old French
- camí Catalan, Valencian
- céimm Old Irish
- *skinkō gmw-pro
- caminno Old Portuguese
- camỹo Old Portuguese
- *kanxsman Proto-Celtic
- *kanxsman-, *kengeti Proto-Celtic
- *kengeti Proto-Celtic
- camin Occitan
- caminar Romansh
- chaminar Romansh
- chaminer Romansh
- tgaminar Romansh
- шѧга Church Slavic, Church Slavonic, Old Church Slavonic, Old Slavonic, Old Bulgarian
- camino Old Spanish
- camìn Ligurian
- *skə́ďďō Proto-Hellenic
- cemin ONF.