< Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic
Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/kaminādā
Proto-West Germanic
Etymology
Borrowed from Late Latin camīnāda, camīnāta (whence Italian camminata, Old French cheminee), from camīnus (“furnace, fireplace”) + -ātus, or camīnō (“to make like an oven or furnace”) + -ātum.
Noun
- heated chamber
Inflection
ōn-stem | ||
---|---|---|
Singular | ||
Nominative | *kaminādā | |
Genitive | *kaminādōn | |
Singular | Plural | |
Nominative | *kaminādā | *kaminādōn |
Accusative | *kaminādōn | *kaminādōn |
Genitive | *kaminādōn | *kaminādōnō |
Dative | *kaminādōn | *kaminādōm |
Instrumental | *kaminādōn | *kaminādōm |
Descendants
- Old Saxon: *kamināda
- Middle Low German: kemenāde, kemenate, kemenāte, kamenāde, kemnāde, kemnede
- ⇒ Old Saxon: kirikkemināda (“rectory”)
- Old Dutch: *kamināda
- Middle Dutch: kēmenade, camenade, kimmenade
- Dutch: kemenade
- Middle Dutch: kēmenade, camenade, kimmenade
- Old High German: kemināta, kemenāta, kemināda
- Middle High German: kemenāte, kamenāte, kemnāte
- German: Kemenate
- → Czech: komnata
- → Polish: komnata
- → Ukrainian: кімна́та (kimnáta)
- → Slovene: kómnata
- → Old East Slavic: комната (komnata)
- Russian: комната (komnata)
- → Kildin Sami: комната (komnata)
- Russian: комната (komnata)
- Middle High German: kemenāte, kamenāte, kemnāte