Etymology of month, moon, menses, meniscus
Posted by Johannes on 1 February 2010
Origin of month, moon, menses, meniscus.
The words moon and month come from the the latin mensis (month), which is related to the Greek Aeolic form meis/mens (μείς/μηνς) of men/mene (μήν/μήνη; month, moon).
.
From the same root:
English: moon, moon- (-beam, -light, …, – strike), moony, month, menses, menstrual, menstruation, menstruate, menstruous, menopause, meniscus (deminutive of mene: small moon during the first quarter).
French: mois, mensuel
Italian: mese, mensile
Spanish: mes, mensual,
German: Monat, monatlich
.
In modern Greek:
a) menas: month [μήνας]
b) emmena: menses, period [έμμηνα]
c) emmenopause: menopause [εμμηνόπαυση]
d) emmenorrhoea: menstruation [εμμηνόρροια]
______
Οι λέξεις moon (σελήνη) και month (μήνας) προέρχονται από το λατινικό mensis (μήνας), το οποίο σχετίζεται με το Ελληνικό μήν/μήνη (μήνας, σελήνη).
OED
_________________________ Post 130. _________________
______________________________________________________________
Tags within the post: etymology of moon, etymology of moony, etymology of month, etymology of menses, etymology of menstrual, etymology of menstruation, etymology of menstruate, etymology of menstruous, etymology of menopause, etymology of meniscus, etymologia, etymologie, etymologie de mois, etymologie de mensuel, origine de mois, origine de mensuel, learn Greek online, learn easily Greek using cognates, learn Greek for free, etymology, etymologie, etymologia, origin of Latin words, etymology of English, loan words in English, origin of English, origin of English words, English words from Greek, Latin words from Greek, Greek language, ετυμολογία, ετυμολογία Λατινικών, ετυμολογία αγγλικών λέξεων, προέλευση αγγλικών λέξεων, προέλευση Λατινικών, ελληνικές λέξεις στα Αγγλικά, αντιδάνεια, French words from Greek, English words from Greek, Spanish words from Greek, German words from Greek, Italian words from Greek, loanwords, etymology of French words, etymology of English words, etymology of Spanish words, etymology of German words, etymology of Italian words, etymologie der Monat, origin of moon, origin of moony, origin of month, origin of menses, origin of menstrual, origin of menstruation, origin of menstruate, origin of menstruous, origin of menopause, origin of meniscus.
This entry was posted on 1 February 2010 at 12:52 am and is filed under M.
Tagged: English words from Greek, Etymologia, etymologie, etymologie de mensuel, etymologie de mois, etymologie der Monat, etymology, etymology of English, etymology of English words, etymology of French words, etymology of German words, etymology of Italian words, etymology of meniscus, etymology of menopause, etymology of menses, etymology of menstrual, etymology of menstruate, etymology of menstruation, etymology of menstruous, etymology of month, etymology of moon, etymology of moony, etymology of Spanish words, French words from Greek, German words from Greek, greek language, Italian words from Greek., προέλευση Λατινικών, προέλευση αγγλικών λέξεων, Ετυμολογία Λατινικών, αντιδάνεια, ετυμολογία, ετυμολογία αγγλικών λέξεων, ελληνικές λέξεις στα Αγγλικά, Latin words from Greek, learn easily Greek using cognates, Learn Greek for free, Learn Greek online, loan words in English, loanwords, origin of English, origin of English words, origin of Latin words, origin of meniscus., origin of menopause, origin of menses, origin of menstrual, origin of menstruation, origin of menstruous, origin of month, origin of moon, origin of moony, origine de mensuel, origine de mois, Spanish words from Greek. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
Nomia: Lua | ECLIPTICA said
[…] Muitas mulheres experimentam também grandes variações durante seu ciclo menstrual (alias, etimologicamente, menstruação e lua são vocábulos relacionados entre si). . O ciclo lunar de 29.5 dias quase […]
AeroDoe said
Well done! And many thanks. 💫🌟💫
Meniscus also refers to the half-moon shape of the surface of liquids in a cylinder (water bows up; mercury is a depression). And two fibrocartilages in the knee (medial and lateral) which also have a sort of half-moon shape.