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But the strict sense, the etymon of the word nobility is essentially dynamic.
Papyrus is also the etymon of 'paper', a similar substance.
Hydronyms from various languages can all share a common etymon.
Various attempts to find an etymon are as follows:
Nor is its obvious climactic etymon, away from which I avert my eyes in shyness.
Carr (1995:13) cites Japanese tradition and historical phonology to support the latter etymon.
Campaniacum is the etymon inferred from numerous toponyms in France.
The word etymology is derived from the Greek etymon, meaning true sense and the suffix -logia, denoting the study of.
Gesceap, the etymon of English 'shape', is documented as far back as around 1050.
The word text, like web, derives from an etymon denoting 'something woven.'
The path from the etymon to the modern dollar is secure, but the path for the dollar sign is somewhat mysterious.
The putative goddess Hretha mentioned by Bede would likely also be connected to the same etymon.
The Greek etymon was soteria, "deliverance," from sozein, "to save," growing out of sos, "safe, sound."
The name of Welsh mythological figure Modron, mother of Mabon is derived from the same etymon.
In these cases, he has names separate from the Dyeus etymon, either Perkwunos or Taran-.
Putative residents of Venus are often referred to as Venusians, although Venerians would be more consistent with the Latin etymon.
That's a less likely etymon than the mispronounced Pinkerton (whose symbol, an open eye with the slogan "We never sleep" under it, gave us the expression private eye).
Lexicographic Irregular Coral Samuel of London called with a deeper etymon: "Try the Temple Bar."
Ādarśa is Sanskrit for "mirror", the term may be parsed into the etymon of darśana with a grammatical adposition.
The compound then comprised a later-added semantic determinative, 扌, plus what is now often termed an etymon (the original part, or "root"), 采.
The etymon karn- "horn" appears in both Gaulish and Galatian branches of Continental Celtic.
Dechar speculates that the terms "Tao" and "Dharma" are etymologically related by the etymon "da":
Opinions differ whether the ultimate etymon of this word in Proto-Indo-European was *g'hord-, or *dheregh-.
Some of these, like Venusians for a putative resident of Venus, are technically incorrect; to conform with the Latin language etymon, they should be 'Venerians'.