More etymology for us 📚

WHAT IS THE ORIGIN OF VICINAGE?

Vicinage “a particular neighborhood or district” is a fusion of the Latin adjective vīcīnus “nearby” and the English suffix -age, which forms nouns from other parts of speech. Vīcīnus derives from the noun vīcus “village, hamlet,” which is the source of the suffixes -wich and -wick in English placenames, such as Greenwich and Brunswick, and comes from the Indo-European root weik- “clan” or “settlement.” This same root is the source of villa, from the Latin word for “country house,” and the Ancient Greek noun oikos “home,” which gives English ecology, economy, parochial, and parish.

REF:

https://www.dictionary.com/e/word-of-the-day/vicinage-2021-09-05/?param=wotd-email&click=ca77rh?param%3Dwotd-email&click=ca77rh&utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Live%20WOTD%20Recurring%202021-09-05&utm_term=WOTD

A little etymology for you

WHAT IS THE ORIGIN OF CONNUBIAL?

Connubial “of marriage or wedlock” derives from Latin cōnūbiālis, from cōnūbium“wedding,” plus the adjective-forming suffix -ālis. Cōnūbium, in turn, is a compound of com-“together, with” and nūbere “to wed,” and nūbere (stem nupt-) is the source of marriage-related words such as nubile, nuptial, and prenup. Nūbere is of obscure origin, but one theory is that its original definition was “to cover oneself with a veil,” which would suggest a derivation from nūbēs “cloud.”

REF:

https://www.dictionary.com/e/word-of-the-day/connubial-2021-09-04/?param=wotd-email&click=ca77rh?param%3Dwotd-email&click=ca77rh&utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Live%20WOTD%20Recurringj%202021-09-04&utm_term=WOTD

WOTD: 📚 Here’s an adjective for us! 📚 Word of the Day – putative | Dictionary.com

Word of the Day – putative | Dictionary.com
— Read on www.dictionary.com/e/word-of-the-day/putative-2021-04-10/

WOTD: 📚 Word of the Day – sweven – Dictionary.com

Word of the Day – sweven | Dictionary.com
— Read on www.dictionary.com/e/word-of-the-day/

WOTD: 📚 Word of the Day 📚 – darg – – Dictionary.com

Word of the Day – darg | Dictionary.com
— Read on www.dictionary.com/e/word-of-the-day/