different between granduncle vs cousin
granduncle
English
Etymology
From Middle English graunt oncle, equivalent to grand- +? uncle.
Noun
granduncle (plural granduncles)
- Synonym of great-uncle
- A brother of grandparent
Alternative forms
- grand uncle
- grand-uncle
Related terms
- grandaunt
Translations
granduncle From the web:
- what granduncle means
- what does granduncle
- what does grand uncle means
- what is your granduncle
- what makes a granduncle
- whats a granduncle
- what is a great granduncle
- why great uncle and not granduncle
cousin
English
Etymology
From Middle English cosyn, from Old French cosin, from Latin c?ns?br?nus, from com- + s?br?nus.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?k?z.n?/
- (General American) IPA(key): /?k?z.?n/, /?k?z?n/
- (US, weak vowel merger) IPA(key): [?k??z.??n]
- Rhymes: -?z?n
- Homophone: cozen (weak vowel merger)
Noun
cousin (plural cousins)
- The child of a person's uncle or aunt; a first cousin.
- Synonym: first cousin
- Any relation who is not a direct ancestor or descendant but part of one's extended family; one more distantly related than an uncle, aunt, granduncle, grandaunt, nephew, niece, grandnephew, grandniece, etc.
- (obsolete) A title formerly given by a king to a nobleman, particularly to those of the council. In English writs, etc., issued by the crown, it signifies any earl.
- (figuratively) Something kindred or related to something else.
- 2003 Nov. 21, Tim Homfray, "What do they mean...," Times Educational Supplement (UK) (retrieved 20 Nov 2012):
- Partnering, along with its less irritating cousin "partnership", crops up all over the place, being equally useful to the lazy jargoneer and the lazy policy-maker. It has been said that there is no noun which cannot be verbed; in the same way, there is now nothing, concrete or abstract, which cannot be partnered.
- 2003 Nov. 21, Tim Homfray, "What do they mean...," Times Educational Supplement (UK) (retrieved 20 Nov 2012):
- (espionage, slang, chiefly in the plural) A member of the British intelligence services (from an American perspective) or of the American intelligence services (from a British perspective).
Usage notes
- People who have common grandparents but different parents are first cousins. People who have common great-grandparents but no common grandparents and different parents are second cousins, and so on.
- In general, one's nth cousin is anyone other than oneself, one's siblings or nearer cousins found by going back n+1 generations and then forward n+1 generations. One of one's first cousin's parents is one's parents' siblings. One of one's second cousin's grandparents is one of one's grandparents' siblings.
- The child of one's first cousin is one's first cousin once removed; the grandchild of one's first cousin is one's first cousin twice removed, and so on. For example, if Phil and Marie are first cousins, and Marie has a son Andre, then Phil and Andre are first cousins once removed.
- In the southern US, the relation is considered the number of links between two people of common ancestry to the common aunt or uncle.
- A patrilineal or paternal cousin is a father's niece or nephew, and a matrilineal or maternal cousin a mother's. Paternal and maternal parallel cousins are father's brother's child and mother's sister's child, respectively; paternal and maternal cross cousins are father's sister's child and mother's brother's child, respectively.
Hyponyms
Derived terms
Translations
See also
- once removed
- twice removed
Further reading
- cousin on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Anagrams
- scioun
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ku.z??/
Etymology 1
From Middle French cousin, from Old French cosin, from Latin c?ns?br?nus.
Noun
cousin m (plural cousins, feminine cousine)
- cousin (male)
Etymology 2
From Latin culic?nus (“mosquito-like”), from culex (“gnat, midge”).
Noun
cousin m (plural cousins)
- crane fly
Synonyms
- maringouin
Derived terms
- cousinière (“protective mesh against crane flies”)
Further reading
- “cousin” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Middle French
Etymology
From Old French cosin.
Noun
cousin m (plural cousins, feminine singular cousine, feminine plural cousines)
- male cousin
Descendants
- French: cousin
Norman
Alternative forms
- couôsîn (Standard Jèrriais)
- couôthîn (Saint Ouen)
Etymology
From Old French cosin, from Latin c?ns?br?nus.
Noun
cousin m (plural cousins, feminine cousaine)
- (Guernsey) (male) cousin
cousin From the web:
- what cousin can you marry
- what cousin is legal to marry
- what cousins were philip and elizabeth
- what cousin are you
- what cousin is safe to marry
- what cousins share great grandparents
- what cousin can you marry in alabama
- what cousin means
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