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ek-

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Esperanto

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Etymology

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From Ancient Greek ἐκ (ek).[1]

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): [ek]
  • Audio:(file)
  • Hyphenation: ek

Prefix

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ek-

  1. The prefix ek- indicates that the action it modifies is momentary or just beginning. It marks the inceptive aspect of verbs.
    ek- + ‎krii (to cry) → ‎ekkrii (to cry out)
    ek- + ‎kanti (to sing) → ‎ekkanti (to begin to sing)

Derived terms

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  • ek (let's go)
  • eki (to begin, to start)
  • eko (beginning, start)

References

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  1. ^ André Cherpillod, Konciza Etimologia Vortaro, 2007

Ido

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Etymology

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Prefix form of ek (out of (motion from; made or extracted from; fractional part of), out from, out (forth from), of (made of)).

Prefix

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ek-

  1. prefix indicating out, out from
    ek- + ‎irar (to go) → ‎ekirar (to go out; exit)

Derived terms

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Northern Ohlone

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Etymology

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Compare Southern Ohlone -ka.

Pronoun

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ek-

  1. I (first-person, singular, proclitic subject pronoun)
    • 1921, María de los Angeles Colós, José Guzman, and John Peabody Harrington, Chochenyo Field Notes[1]:
      ek-jawwasin
      I will wait [for it]

Determiner

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ek-

  1. my (first-person, singular, possessive)
    • 1921, María de los Angeles Colós, José Guzman, and John Peabody Harrington, Chochenyo Field Notes[2]:
      kiš kaayi ek-mootil
      My head is hurting me

See also

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Northern Ohlone personal pronouns
person subject object possessive
disjunctive1 proclitic
enclitic disjunctive1 proclitic enclitic
singular first kaana ek- -ek, -k kiš, kaaniš kiš- -kiš ek-, kaanak
second meene em-, im- -em, -im, -m miš emiš-, imiš-, miš- -miš em-, meenem
third waaka Ø-2 2 wiš Ø-2, eš- 2, -eš i-, waakai-
plural first makkin mak- -mak makkiš, makkinše mak-, makkinmak
second makkam kam- -kam makkamše kam-, makkam
third waakamak ya- -ya yaṭiš ya-, waakamak

1 Disjunctive is mostly used in copular sentences or for emphasis, either alone (eg. kaana) or with a clitic (eg. kaana-k ...-ek).
2 Null morpheme. An unmarked verb implies a third person singular pronoun. The disjunctives waaka and wiš may also be used.
Note: Proclitic and enclitic forms can combine and undergo syncope, eg. ellešk (let me do to him/her/it) = elle +‎ -eš +‎ -ek

References

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  • María de los Angeles Colós, José Guzman, and John Peabody Harrington (1930s) Chochenyo Field Notes (Survey of California and Other Indian Langauges)‎[3], Unpublished