Ultimateria (talk) 23:20, 24 August 2018 (UTC), The etymology section for burlap states that the first part stems from Dutch boeren (“coarse”) (although this links to boeren#Latin!). October definition is - the 10th month of the Gregorian calendar. (Roman Catholic Church) one of the great Fathers of the early Christian church, after a dramatic conversion to Christianity he became bishop of Hippo Regius in North Africa, St. Augustine emphasized man's need for grace (354-430). How to use October in a sentence. A boer is a peasant, and so a boere(n)lap would mean “a peasant-style piece of cloth”, which would presumably not be the finest kind of cloth. This is from calare "to announce solemnly, call out," as the priests did in proclaiming the new moon that marked the calends, from PIE root *kele- (2) "to shout." c. 1400 in reference to members of the religious order named for St. Augustine the Great (354-430), bishop of Hippo. Meaning "list of documents arranged chronologically" is from late 15c. In any case, my goal here isn't to choose or create the best theory, the goal is to create an entry that will be able to integrate information that we have on this etymon in a single location so that all concerned words can refer non-reduntantly to it and all etymological theories, including those that are less likely and those that are yet to be created, can be presented side by side for the benefit of a curious reader or an interested researcher. Etymology of ‘News’ ... 27 August 2020 Fact Check Online commentators and social media users sought to undermine protests sparked by the police shooting of Blake in Wisconsin in August … Irregular changes happen, and Sogdian possesses many words derived from *hwat- related to authority while Saka has none. (That should later develop to ū during stress IV in Novák's model, although that seems irrelevant to the situation here), Development of non-first syllable *o/*ō in Turkic is a topic of importance here (I apologize for the incoming tl;dr). Accented on the first syllable in English until 18c. I'm probably wrong, but despite the difference between כ/ك and ק/ق, as well as the difference between ח/ح/خ and ה/ת/ة, I find it hard to resist the thought that these words (which both mean power/strength) are related. )newspaper ca 1824, published an article about these "college words", and the word "okay" was mentioned. Related: Augustinian. One of two months given new names to honor Roman leaders (July being the other), the Romans also gave new imperial names to September (Germanicus) and October (Domitian) but these did not stick. It's pretty clearly the same word to me. If so, I somewhat disagree. as "table showing divisions of the year;" from Old French calendier "list, register," from Latin calendarium "account book," from calendae/kalendae "the calends" the first day of the Roman month, when debts fell due and accounts were reckoned. I don't think it's the same as the adjectival ending that we have, or is it?

Augustus m (genitive Augustī); second declension, Second-declension noun..mw-parser-output .inflection-table-la .corner-header,.mw-parser-output .inflection-table-la .number-header,.mw-parser-output .inflection-table-la .case-header{font-style:italic}.mw-parser-output .inflection-table-la .corner-header,.mw-parser-output .inflection-table-la .number-header{background-color:#549EA0}.mw-parser-output .inflection-table-la .case-header{background-color:#40E0D0}.mw-parser-output .inflection-table-la .form-cell{background-color:#F8F8FF}, Definition from Wiktionary, the free dictionary, Descendants of Augustus in other languages, https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=Augustus&oldid=59354197, Latin terms derived from the PIE root *h₂ewg-, Latin terms with Ecclesiastical IPA pronunciation, Latin masculine nouns in the second declension, Requests for attention concerning Afrikaans, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Dybo believes that Xiongnu were the Proto-Turkic speakers (or at least contained them), and I would tend to agree, so borrowing through Xiongnu would just mean borrowing into PT (or into Common Turkic if late enough). Augustus 1. The -arspelling in English is 17c. The Roman emperor Augustus, also called Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus (63 B.C.E. Might the existence of another "letter"-bone, T-bone, have reinforced this rebracketing? פֿינצטערניש (talk) 11:41, 22 August 2018 (UTC), Does anyone know why the gender of this word changed from masculine in Latin to feminine in French? Usage of "okay" spread out New England, then eventually around the world. Modern languages don't differentiate between *u and *o in this position, except maybe Yakut and Chuvash, but details are unclear and controversial (note. Janus is depicted with two faces, one looking into the past, the other into the future. In one of Michael Quinlon's (World Wide Words - now retired)weekly emails, he sais: The origin of "okay": United States, USA. Is it saying that "love" in that phrase means "nothing"? Laurel definition is - an evergreen shrub or tree (Laurus nobilis of the family Lauraceae, the laurel family) of southern Europe with small yellow flowers, fruits that are ovoid blackish berries, and evergreen foliage once used by the ancient Greeks to crown victors in the Pythian games —called also bay, sweet bay. We could spend all day pettily discrediting scholars, but what does that accomplish? - -sche (discuss) 17:09, 5 August 2018 (UTC). a system of timekeeping that defines the beginning and length and divisions of the year, a list or register of events (appointments or social events or court cases etc), a tabular array of the days (usually for one year). When the presidential campaign of 1828 began, one of the campaign organizations began using "okay". I would at least demote it to "just someone's theory". Any reason for splitting it into two etymologies? In 8 B.C. I would think it would be far more likely to have been borrowed from Phoenician.