出典:Wiktionary
Clipping.
geno (三人称単数 現在形 genos, 現在分詞 genoing, 過去形および過去分詞形 genoed)
From Proto-Italic *genō, from Proto-Indo-European *ǵenh₁-, this is a connate form of Latin gignō (Cf. honōs かつ honor). Cognate with Ancient Greek γείνομαι (geínomai, “to beget, to bring into being, (passively) to be born”), Ancient Greek γονή (gonḗ, “offspring, seed, act of generation”), Sanskrit जनति (janati, “to beget, to produce, etc.”), Sanskrit जना (janā, “birth, origin”), and other multivarious formations in many languages.
genō (present infinitive genere, perfect active genuī, supine genitum); third conjugation
Genō, though used in Old Latin, had been largely supplanted by the form gignō by the Classical period. Thereafter, usage of genō was largely (though not exclusively) confined to poetic and to legal contexts, especially as pertained to laws of probate and inheritance.
From the stem of Ancient Greek γένος (génos, “race, kind”), also Ancient Greek γεννάω (gennáō, “to produce”) and Latin gēns (“tribe, clan”)
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a rope
the grounds for something
the period of time during which a human being grows up and has a child born, called generation
the nominative case
出産するさま