Capiō
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''[[capiō]]'' is Latin for “I hold”, "I seize", "I lay hold of". | ''[[capiō]]'' is Latin for “I hold”, "I seize", "I lay hold of". | ||
- | See cipiō||cap-||cep-cip-capt-cept-take-[[capable]], [[captive]], [[capture]], [[concept]], [[recipient]], [[reception]], [[exception]], [[perception]], [[precept]] | + | See cipiō||cap-||cep-cip-capt-cept-take-[[accept]], [[capable]], [[captive]], [[capture]], [[concept]], [[recipient]], [[reception]], [[exception]], [[perception]], [[precept]] |
==Etymology== | ==Etymology== | ||
From Proto-Italic ''*kapiō'', from Proto-Indo-European ''*kh₂pyéti'', from the root ''*keh₂p-'' (“to seize, grab”). | From Proto-Italic ''*kapiō'', from Proto-Indo-European ''*kh₂pyéti'', from the root ''*keh₂p-'' (“to seize, grab”). |
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capiō is Latin for “I hold”, "I seize", "I lay hold of".
See cipiō||cap-||cep-cip-capt-cept-take-accept, capable, captive, capture, concept, recipient, reception, exception, perception, precept
Etymology
From Proto-Italic *kapiō, from Proto-Indo-European *kh₂pyéti, from the root *keh₂p- (“to seize, grab”).
Cognate with Breton kavout, Welsh cael, English have, heave, Lithuanian kàmpt, Albanian kap, Ancient Greek κάπτω (káptō)
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