genesis

English

Etymology

    Borrowed from Latin genesis (generation, nativity), from Ancient Greek γένεσις (génesis, origin, source, beginning). Related to Ancient Greek γίγνομαι (gígnomai, to be produced, become, be). Doublet of kind, gens, and jati.

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /ˈd͡ʒɛn.ə.sɪs/
    • (pinpen merger) IPA(key): /ˈd͡ʒɪn.ə.sɪs/
    • Audio (US):(file)
    • Rhymes: -ɛnəsɪs
    • Hyphenation: ge‧ne‧sis

    Noun

    genesis (plural geneses)

    1. The origin, start, or point at which something comes into being.
      Some point to the creation of Magna Carta as the genesis of English common law.
      • 1980, Helmut Brinker, Eberhard Fischer, Treasures from the Rietberg Museum[1], →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL, page 91:
        The genesis of the Chinese bronze mirror can be traced far back into the Chou dynasty. Some pieces that may possibly date from the eighth century B.C., but certainly predate the year 655 B.C., were unearthed in 1956-1957 at Shang-ts’ung-ling near San-men-hsia in western Honan Province.

    Derived terms

    Translations

    Further reading

    Anagrams

    Indonesian

    Etymology

    Learned borrowing from Ancient Greek γένεσις (génesis, origin, source, beginning, nativity, generation, production, creation).

    Pronunciation

    • (Standard Indonesian) IPA(key): /ɡeˈnesis/ [ɡeˈne.sɪs]
    • Rhymes: -esis
    • Syllabification: ge‧ne‧sis

    Noun

    genesis (plural genesis-genesis)

    1. genesis: the origin, start, or point at which something comes into being

    Further reading

    Latin

    Etymology

      Borrowed from Ancient Greek γένεσις (génesis, origin, source, beginning, nativity, generation, production, creation)

      Noun

      genesis f (genitive genesis or geneseōs or genesios); third declension

      1. generation, creation, nativity
      2. birth

      Declension

      Third-declension noun (Greek-type, i-stem).

      singular plural
      nominative genesis genesēs
      geneseis
      genitive genesis
      geneseōs
      genesios
      genesium
      dative genesī genesibus
      accusative genesim
      genesin
      genesem1
      genesēs
      genesīs
      ablative genesī
      genese1
      genesibus
      vocative genesis
      genesi
      genesēs
      geneseis

      1Found sometimes in Medieval and New Latin.

      Descendants

      All borrowed.

      • Catalan: gènesi (learned)
      • Dutch: genese (learned)
      • English: genesis (learned)
      • French: genèse (semi-learned)
      • Italian: genesi (learned)
      • Spanish: génesis (learned)
      • Norwegian Bokmål: genesis, genese (learned)
      • Norwegian Nynorsk: genesis, genese (learned)
      • Polish: geneza (learned)
      • Turkish: genez (learned)

      Norwegian Nynorsk

      Etymology

      From Ancient Greek γένεσις (génesis, origin, creation, beginning), from Proto-Indo-European *ǵénh₁tis (birth, production), from *ǵenh₁-.

      Noun

      genesis m (definite singular genesisen, indefinite plural genesisar, definite plural genesisane)

      1. creation, genesis, origin

      References