Talk:amnicolist

Hello, in french
we'd say that a reed, a rush or a muskrat is amnicole , but a population living on a riverside is riveraine. In spanish : ribereño (who is also used to designate the inhabitants of Aranjuez, a little historic town near Madrid), & costeño, costero, riberense. In italian : rivierasco.

BTW, though watery, seems to have no common stem with « amniotic ». Or has it ? T.y. Arapaima 07:45, 7 September 2010 (UTC)


 * I've added those translations you suggested, but I've substituted the French translation with its lemma . What's the gender for the Spanish, , and ? (Languages with grammatical gender are meant to have words' gender noted in translation tables.)


 * According to the OED, amniotic, a. is an English coinage, being an adjectival alteration of amnios, which is an etymologically erroneous variant of amnion, which itself derives from the Ancient Greek, the diminutive form of . (It notes that the error probably arose first in French, which has and , and that the etymologically consistent adjective would be , after the Ancient Greek .) Despite the seeming conceptual nearness of undefined: and undefined:, the Latin  and the Ancient Greek  are unrelated.


 * — Raifʻhār Doremítzwr ~ (U · T · C) ~ 12:27, 7 September 2010 (UTC)


 * Thanks Raif'hàr. In french, riverain is masc., riveraine is fem. (like "population"). In spanish & italian, all adj. ending with o are masculine. T.y. Arapaima 14:51, 7 September 2010 (UTC)


 * Thank you; and ? I knew that about undefined:; terms given in Translations tables should be lemmata. — Raifʻhār Doremítzwr ~ (U · T · C) ~ 19:16, 7 September 2010 (UTC)


 * The spanish word riberense is the same for masc. & fem. genders. Wikcionario gives 2 ex. of it, taken from the press : los bomberos del destacamento riberense  (fire-men from the river-side crew)  -  &  una histórica villa riberense (a typical river-side villa).
 * So amnicole is a "cognate" ? Anyway, it's the word used in french, & it is found in the "Grand Larousse du XX° siècle" ( tome I, p. 195) . T.s. Arapaima 08:58, 8 September 2010 (UTC)


 * You said that describes "a reed, a rush or a muskrat", which is not the same thing as the English term. undefined: looks like an adjective to me, judging from those quotations. How many of these terms are nouns that mean "one who dwells near a river"? — Raifʻhār Doremítzwr ~ (U · T · C) ~ 11:03, 9 September 2010 (UTC)