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pannous edited this page Aug 6, 2023 · 3 revisions

๓ดœฉ ๓ดœช ๓ดœซ ๓ดœฌ ๓ดœง ๓ดœจ cut

The t of kataยฎ is hidden in ๐“Œจ ๐“‚‹ ฯงโฒโฒงโฒโฒฃโณผ katar ฮบฮฑฯ„ฮฌ katรก ฮบฮฌฯ„ฯ‰ kรกto ๐’† ๐’‹ซ kita cata- (ฯง Khai) สฑunder, downwards ๐“๐“‚‹๐“€’
๐“Œจ๐“‚‹ ฯงโฒโฒงโฒโฒฃโณผ ฯงโฒ- ฯงโฒโฒฃโฒŸโณผ hinter แตunder ๐“Œจ care โ‡” ante
๐“Œจ เคšเฅเคฏเคตเคคเฅ‡ cyavate, โ€œto come forth, to fall downโ€

แšบแšจแ›แ›แ›– haite ๐Œท๐Œฐ๐Œน๐„๐Œฐ๐Œฝ haitan heissen From Proto-Indo-European *key-d-, a dental extension of the root Proto-Indo-European *key- (โ€œto move, to impelโ€). Cognate with Ancient Greek ฮบฮนฮฝฮญฯ‰ (kinรฉล, โ€œto set in motion, to arouseโ€), Latin cieล (โ€œto set in motion, to summonโ€), Sanskrit เคšเฅเคฏเคตเคคเฅ‡ (cyavate, โ€œto come forth, to fall downโ€), Albanian qoj (โ€œto wake upโ€). Perhaps the original notion was "to summon", i.e. "to order someone to come" (cf. the parallel usage of English cite (โ€œto summon (someone)โ€), from the cognate Latin root).

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