出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/05/08 23:44 UTC 版)
The adjective (as “combined, united”) and noun are first attested in 1471, in 中期英語, the verb in 1530; partly from 中期英語 conjugat(e) (“combined, united”), partly directly borrowed from New Latin coniugātus, the perfect passive participle of Latin coniugō (“to yoke together, combine; (New Latin) to conjugate, decline, inflect”) (see -ate (etymology 1, 2 and 3)), from con- (“with”) + iugō (“to join”). In Classical Latin, the word for conjugate (grammar) was dēclīnō, coniugō is a later back-formation from post-classical coniugātiō (“conjugation, declension”).
conjugate (third-person singular simple present conjugates, present participle conjugating, simple past and past participle conjugated)
conjugate (plural conjugates)
conjugate (not comparable)
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