tataranieto
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Spanish[edit]
Etymology[edit]
From tras- + Old Spanish trasnieto (“great-grandchild”), from tras- + nieto (“grandson”), formed from nieta (“granddaughter”), from Late Latin nepta, from Latin neptis, from Proto-Indo-European *néptih₂. Compare Latin nepōs (“grandson, grandaughter, nephew, niece”) (genitive singular nepōtis).
Noun[edit]
tataranieto m (plural tataranietos, feminine tataranieta, feminine plural tataranietas)
- great-great-grandchild; great-great-grandson (great-great-granddaughter for the feminine form)
Coordinate terms[edit]
- bisnieto (“great-grandchild/son”)
- decanieto (“ninth-great-grandchild/son”)
- eneanieto (“ninth-great-grandchild/son”)
- heptanieto (“seventh-great-grandchild/son”)
- hexanieto (“sixth-great-grandchild/son”)
- nieto (“grandchild/son”)
- octanieto (“eighth-great-grandchild/son”)
- pentanieto, bichozno (“fourth-great-grandchild/son”)
- trastataranieto, chozno (“great-great-great-grandchild/son”)
Related terms[edit]
Further reading[edit]
- “tataranieto”, in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014