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hego
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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See also: heĝo
Basque
Alternative forms
- hegal (Etymology 2)
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
Perhaps from Occitan eigau (“south wind bringing rain”), from Latin aquālem (“watery”), from aqua (“water”).
Noun
hego inan
Declension
Coordinate terms
compass points: puntu kardinalak: [edit]
| ipar-mendebal ipar-sartalde |
ipar | ipar-ekialde ipar-sortalde |
| mendebal sartalde |
ekialde sortalde | |
| hego-mendebal hego-sartalde |
hego | hego-ekialde hego-sortalde |
Etymology 2
There are two possibilities:
- Hego is a variant of hegal. Unlikely, since the change al>o is not attested anywhere else in the language (the word eusko is an artificial and arbitrary alteration of euskal created by Sabino Arana).
- Hego is the original form, hegal being a compound with an obscure second element. More likely and phonetically impeccable, and also accounts for hegaz and hegats, though a final element -l is otherwise unattested.
Noun
hego inan
Declension
Derived terms
Further reading
- “hego”, in Euskaltzaindiaren Hiztegia [Dictionary of the Basque Academy] (in Basque), Euskaltzaindia [Royal Academy of the Basque Language]
- “hego”, in Orotariko Euskal Hiztegia [General Basque Dictionary], Euskaltzaindia, 1987–2005
References
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Ido
Alternative forms
Etymology
Borrowed from English hedge, French haie, German Hecke and Gehege. Decision no. 157, Progreso III.
Pronunciation
Noun
hego (plural hegi)
Derived terms
- hegizar (“to hedge, hedge in”)
- hego-rozo (“dog rose”)
- hego-roziero (“sweetbrier, eglantine”)
References
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