co-

English dictionary entry

Meanings

prefix
  1. Together: the root word is done co-incidently.
  2. Jointly: the root verb is done in coordination between multiple actors or entities
  3. Along with: the root verb is done along with or in addition to others.
  4. Mutually: the root is done in a way that is reciprocal and bidirectional.
  5. Simultaneously, done or able to do at the same time.
  6. Spatially located or positioned together, co-located.
  7. In conjunction: the root needs another entity to take effect, or there is a one-way interaction between them.
  8. Moving or oriented in the same direction; co-directional.
  9. Gender-mixed; having men and women together for the root activity or location.
  10. Having commonality, similarity with respect to the root.
  11. Coequal, equal in rank.
  12. Indicating a family relationship that indicates a common rank made through three degrees of separation, the middle of which is by marriage.
prefix
  1. Initialism of class of; prefixed to a full or abbreviated year number.

Pronunciation

kōʹ /ˈkəʊ-/ /ˌkəʊ-/ /ˈkoʊ-/ /ˌkoʊ-/ /koː/ /ko/ [ˈkʌo-] [ˌkʌo-] LL-Q1860 (eng)-Flame, not lame-co-.wav /ˈkəʉ-/ /ˌkəʉ-/ /ˈkɐʉ-/ /ˌkɐʉ-/ /kɒ-/

Word forms

co-

Etymology

Etymology tree Proto-Indo-European *ḱe Proto-Indo-European *ḱóm Proto-Italic *kom Proto-Italic *kom- Latin con- Latin co-der. English co- From Latin co-, allomorph of Latin con-.

Translations

Asturian: co- Catalan: co- Czech: spolu- Czech: sou- Danish: sam- Dutch: mede- Esperanto: kun- Finnish: yhteis- French: co- North Frisian: mä- Galician: co- Georgian: თანა- German: ko- German: mit- Hindi: सम्- Hindi: सं- Hindi: हम- Ido: kun- Indonesian: ko- Irish: comh- Italian: co- Northern Kurdish: hev- Latin: co- Low German: met- Low German: mit- Norwegian: sam- Persian: همـ Polish: współ- Portuguese: co- Russian: со- Russian: ко- Russian: взаимо- Sanskrit: सम्- Sanskrit: सं- Serbo-Croatian: sa- Serbo-Croatian: su- Spanish: co- Swedish: ko- Swedish: med- Tagalog: ka- Tigrinya: ብሓባር- Unami: wit- Urdu: ہمـ
This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.