< Reconstruction:Latin
Reconstruction:Latin/cinusia
Latin
Etymology
From cinus, a less commonly used variant of Latin cinis, from Proto‐Indo‐European *ken-.
Pronunciation
- (Classical) IPA(key): /kiˈnuː.si.a/, [kɪˈnuː.si.a]
- (Vulgar) IPA(key): /kiˈnuː.si.a/, [kʲeˈnu.sʲa]
Noun
*cinūsia f (genitive *cinūsiē); first declension
- (Vulgar Latin) ash
Inflection
First declension.
Italo-Western declension of *cinūsia | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Number | Singular | Plural | ||
nominative | *cẹnúsia | *cẹnúsẹę | ||
genitive | *cẹnúsẹę | *cẹnusiárọ | ||
dative | *cẹnúsẹę | *cẹnúsẹis | ||
accusative-ablative | *cẹnúsiã | *cẹnúsias |
Eastern declension of *cinūsia | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Number | Singular | Plural | ||
nominative | *cẹnúsia | *cẹnúsẹę | ||
genitive | *cẹnúsẹę | *cẹnusiáru | ||
dative | *cẹnúsẹę | *cẹnúsẹis | ||
accusative-ablative | *cẹnúsiã | *cẹnúsias |
Descendants
- Aromanian: cinushi, tsinushã
- Corsican: cianugia
- Istro-Romanian: țerușe
- Megleno-Romanian: tšănuşă
- Romanian: cenușă