caminata

Etymology
, that is and.

CE in sense 1 and the ninth century in sense 3, which developed in northern France to fill the semantic space vacated by, the latter having been locally discarded after it became a homophone for due to ongoing consonant degemination.

The French descendant of, namely , made its way into numerous other languages as chimney-making techniques spread from northern France.

Pronunciation
The etymological [i(ː)] would be expected to ‘weaken’ to [ɪ] due to its position (second syllable of a tetrasyllabic paroxytone).

Some corroboration of the [ɪ]/[e] variant indicated by the spelling ⟨camenata⟩ comes in the form of Old French reflexes with ⟨e⟩ in the second syllable, such as. Nevertheless ⟨i⟩ is more common in Old French (, etc).

The [i] in could equally derive from an older [i(ː)] or [ɪ]/[e] by regular sound-changes.

Otherwise, all the Romance reflexes unambiguously reflect an original [i(ː)]. The overall triumph of this vowel can be attributed to continued influence from the root word where [i(ː)] was stressed and hence not subject to the aforementioned weakening. In French there may also have been a folk-etymology of as  +  which legitimized forms like  against opaque forms like.

Noun

 * 1)  room with a chimney, living room, parlour
 * 2)  bedroom
 * 3)  chimney

Descendants

 * Italo-Romance:
 * North Italian:
 * Gallo-Romance:
 * Gallo-Romance:
 * Gallo-Romance:
 * Gallo-Romance:

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) (long) walk, hike, trek