ķemmēt

Latvian

Ķemmēt matus

Etymology

From ķemmē (comb), a borrowing from Low German, made into a second conjugation verb stem (ending -ēt). Alternatively, it may be a direct borrowing from Middle Low German [Term?] (cf. German kämmen (to comb)). First mentioned in 17th-century sources.[1]

Verb

ķemmēt tr., 2nd conj., pres. ķemmēju, ķemmē, ķemmē, past ķemmēju

  1. (of people's hair) to comb (to smooth with a comb)
    ķemmēt matusto comb (one's) hair
    ķemmēt pie spoguļa matusto comb one's hair by the mirror
    kandidāts bija nedaudz pāri labākajiem gadiem, vairākas dienas neķemmētiem pelēkiem matiemthe nominee was a little over his better years, with hair many days uncombed
  2. (of animal hair, fur) to comb (to smooth, also to clean, with a comb)
    ķemmēt sunito comb the dog
    ķemmēt zirgam krēpesto comb the mane of the horse
  3. (colloquial, especially military) to comb (to search thoroughly)
    fašisti gatavojās ķemmēt mežuthe fascists are preparing to comb the forest
    ciemā jau iet žandarmu ķēde, ķemmēdama māju pēc mājas; meklē vīriešusin the village a chain (= group) of gendarmes is going (around), combing house after house; they are looking for (certain) men

Conjugation

Synonyms

Derived terms

prefixed verbs:
  • atķemmēt
  • izķemmēt
  • noķemmēt
  • paķemmēt
  • pārķemmēt
  • pieķemmēt
  • saķemmēt
  • uzķemmēt
other derived terms:
  • ķemmēties

References

  1. Karulis, Konstantīns (1992), ķemme”, in Latviešu Etimoloģijas Vārdnīca (in Latvian), Rīga: AVOTS, →ISBN
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.