I mention it because the cognate words in many languages do not carry the same implication, and you'll often see someone whose native language is, say, Italian, use " condemned " when the correct English word choice would be " convicted " .-- talk ) 19 : 06, 16 August 2011 ( UTC)
32.
:: It's pretty much a linguistic universal that body parts are used for geographical and direction descriptions such as " foot of the mountain " . ( In Slavic, the cognate word for foot, " pid ", in my family's dialect, means beneath ) Such terms are common with the indigenous peoples of Siberia.
33.
In Penone's work, above all its more recent developments, the opposed concepts of " identit?" ( " identity " ) and " identicit?" ( " analogy " ) are assimilated according to a logic that is not extraneous to the Italian language, as in other European languages in which the two cognate words share the same etymon.
34.
:: : : : Nationality is sometimes used simply as an alternate word for ethnicity or national origin, just as some people assume that citizenship and nationality are identical & In some countries, the cognate word for nationality in local language may be understood as a synonym of ethnicity, or as an identifier of cultural and family-based self-determination, rather than on relations with a state or current government.
35.
Medeis's point is that in early Indo-European languages, there was ALSO not a separate word, which is why both Whale and Shark are cognate words : not to point out that the bible is saying that it was a shark that swallowed Jonah, but merely to point out that linguistically, different words have evolved from the same earlier word that means " large fish " .-- 32 " "'03 : 48, 27 March 2013 ( UTC)