cenit

See also: ceniť and cénit

Czech

Etymology

Inherited from Old Czech cěniti, from Proto-Slavic *cěniti.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈt͡sɛɲɪt]

Verb

cenit impf

  1. to value, to prize

Conjugation

Conjugation of cenit
infinitive cenit, ceniti active adjective cenící


verbal noun cenění passive adjective ceněný
present forms indicative imperative
singular plural singular plural
1st person cením ceníme ceňme
2nd person ceníš ceníte ceň ceňte
3rd person cení cení

The future tense: a combination of a future form of být + infinitive cenit.

participles past participles passive participles
singular plural singular plural
masculine animate cenil cenili ceněn ceněni
masculine inanimate cenily ceněny
feminine cenila ceněna
neuter cenilo cenila ceněno ceněna
transgressives present past
masculine singular ceně
feminine + neuter singular ceníc
plural ceníce
adjectives

Further reading

Latin

Alternative forms

Etymology

From misreading earlier cemt, from Arabic سَمْت (samt, direction, path), from Aramaic סֵימִטָא, from Latin sēmĭta.

Pronunciation

Noun

cenit n (indeclinable) (Medieval Latin)

  1. (astronomy) zenith (point in the sky vertically above a given position or observer)
    • For quotations using this term, see Citations:cenit.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Plato Tiburtinus to this entry?)
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor to this entry?)

Descendants

  • Middle English: cenyth, cenith, senyth, cenit, cinit, senith (learned)
    • English: zenith
  • Old French: cenit m (learned)

Further reading

  • "cenith", in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition with additions by D. P. Carpenterius, Adelungius and others, edited by Léopold Favre, 1883–1887)
  • Paul Kunitzsch, The Arabs and the Stars: Texts and Traditions on the Fixed Stars and Their Influence in Medieval Europe, Routledge (→ISBN), 2017: Latin translators borrowed it as cemt/zemt capitis, and finally cemt/zemt was misread and miswritten, in Latin, as cenit/Zenit.

Middle English

Noun

cenit

  1. alternative form of cenyth

Old French

Etymology

Noun

cenit oblique singularm (oblique plural ceniz or cenitz, nominative singular ceniz or cenitz, nominative plural cenit)

  1. zenith (point in the sky vertically above a given position or observer)

Descendants

Spanish

Alternative forms

Etymology

Borrowed from Medieval Latin cenit, from Arabic سَمْت (samt, direction, path), from the fuller form سَمْت اَلرَّأْس (samt ar-raʔs, direction of the head). The -ni- for -m- is sometimes thought to be due to a misreading of the three strokes, which is plausible, though it could be a mere phonetic approximation.

Pronunciation

Noun

cenit m (plural cenites)

  1. zenith
    Synonym: auge

Further reading