1432: Effects of Latin Participles Nov 12, 2018
It is because of Latin participles that there is a 't' in 'commit' but an 's' in 'mission', even though they come from the same word. In Latin, it was common that if the stem of a verb ended in a 't' that the participial for would have an 's' there instead. There is no particular reason that this happened, but it effects many languages now. For instance, in English, 'compromise' is a noun and also a verb, and stressed the same way too. In German though, 'Kompromiss' is only the noun, and the verbal form is 'kompromittieren', and indeed comes from this same Latin pattern
Check out the newest Word Theory, only through Patreon https://www.patreon.com/posts/21778966
Check out the newest Word Theory, only through Patreon https://www.patreon.com/posts/21778966
Comments
Post a Comment