| mouse | 遺伝子名 | UM |
| 同義語(エイリアス) | E-cadherin; Ecad; AA960649; UVO; Uvomorulin; Cdh1; Cadherin-1; cadherin 1; uvomorulin; CD324 antigen; MGC107495; Epithelial-cadherin precursor; Um; ARC-1 | |
| SWISS-PROTのID | SWISS-PROT:P09803 | |
| EntrezGeneのID | EntrezGene:12550 | |
| その他のDBのID | MGI:88354 |
本文中に表示されているデータベースの説明
出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/12/30 17:26 UTC 版)
From the homographic case endings of the nominative, accusative, and vocative forms of numerous neuter Latin second declension nouns.
-um
From Proto-West Germanic *-um, possibly from Proto-Germanic *-amaz with reduction and analogical zero-grade, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *-om, also reconstructed as *-oHom. This etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term.
-um
From Proto-Italic *-om, from Proto-Indo-European *-om (thematic masculine singular accusative and neuter singular nominative and accusative ending).
-um
-um
Latin genitive plural forms take the ending -um either by itself, or with additional preceding material (generally determined by the word's declension class). First and second declension nouns and adjectives usually have genitive plural forms ending in -ārum and -ōrum, but some words can take the short ending -um (without preceding -ār-/-ōr-) instead: this is common with words denoting weights, measures and monetary value and with distributive numerals.
The spelling -ûm (or -ôm after V/U), introduced in the Renaissance, is used in some New Latin texts for forms such as amphorûm and deûm. These forms were misinterpreted as contractions of amphorārum and deōrum and were therefore incorrectly assumed to end in -ūm (with a vowel long by nature) in contrast to -ŭm (with a vowel short by nature, as in accusative singular deum). Compare the use of the circumflex in New Latin to distinguish the ablative ending -â (with long ā) from the nominative/vocative ending -a (with short ă) in first declension singular nouns, or to mark third-person plural perfect forms ending in -ēre, which was assumed to be a "contracted" form of the alternative ending -ērunt (e.g. fuêre, taken to be a contraction of fuerent). However, the assumed distinction in vowel length between genitive plural deûm with long ū and accusative singular deum with short ŭ is outdated: according to modern etymological understanding, all Latin words ending in -um, regardless of their case, number or declension, were pronounced in Classical Latin with a short vowel in the final syllable. Rather than being contractions, second-declension genitive plural forms in -um such as deum are archaisms showing the original Proto-Indo-European inflection pattern for nouns of this declension.
Third declension words that have genitive plurals ending in -um as an alternative to -ium have also been spelled with -ûm, again with the justification that the shorter ending is interpreted as being a contraction of the longer variant. Examples are coelestûm and caedûm used as spellings of the short genitive plurals of coelestis and caedes (compared to the long forms coelestium and caedium).
Aside from the contraction hypothesis, the use of the circumflexed spelling -ûm may additionally have been influenced by the use of the circumflex in the spelling of Greek genitive plural forms ending in -ῶν.
Contracted from them.
'um
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/03/26 18:17 UTC 版)
From 中期英語 um-, umbe-, embe-, from 古期英語 ymb-, ymbe- (“around”), from Proto-West Germanic *umbi-, from Proto-Germanic *umbi (“around, about, by, near”), from Proto-Indo-European *h₂m̥bʰi (“round about, around”). Cognate with Dutch om- (“around”), German um- (“around”), Latin amb- (“around, about”), Latin ambi- (“both”), Ancient Greek ἀμφί (amphí, “around, about”), Sanskrit अभि (abhi, “against, about”).
um-
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