User:KarikaSlayer/esco

Etymology
From a fusion of two verb suffixes: inchoative and denominative-causative.

Suffix

 * 1)  {{n-g|Forms {{glossary|inchoative}} verbs from adjectives.
 * 2) {{lb|la|Vulgar Latin|transitive}} {{n-g|Forms {{glossary|causative}} verbs from adjectives.

Descendants
This suffix, nowadays a simple interfix, only survives on the peripheries of Romance, and in Ibero-Romance competed with and was eventually ousted by original, with only a few defective verbs remaining as relics. Elsewhere in Romance, it was displaced by the later development.


 * Aromanian:
 * Catalan:
 * Franco-Provençal:
 * Ladin:
 * Romanian:
 * Romansch:


 * Corsican:
 * Friulian:
 * Italian:
 * Lombard:
 * Neapolitan: ,
 * Occitan:
 * Old French:
 * Bourguignon:
 * Middle French:
 * French:
 * Walloon:
 * Venetian: