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Cognatic kinship is a mode of descent calculated from an ancestor counted through any combination of male and female links, or a system of bilateral kinship where relations are traced through both a father and mother. [1] Such relatives may be known as cognates .
In historical linguistics, cognates or lexical cognates are sets of words that have been inherited in direct descent from an etymological ancestor in a common parent language. [1] .
In most contexts, it means the inheritance of the firstborn son (agnatic primogeniture); [1] it can also mean by the firstborn daughter (matrilineal primogeniture), or firstborn child (absolute primogeniture).
Ambilineal (or Cognatic) rule affiliates an individual with kinsmen through the father's or mother's line. Some people in societies that practise this system affiliate with a group of relatives through their fathers and others through their mothers.
Agnatic-cognatic (or semi-Salic) succession, prevalent in much of Europe since ancient times, is the restriction of succession to those descended from or related to a past or current monarch exclusively through the male line of descent: descendants through females were ineligible to inherit unless no males of the patrilineage ...
1. Que pertenece o concierne a la cognación (relación de un pariente con otro por línea materna o de cualquier tipo. Vínculo familiar, ascendencia y parentesco trazados por maternidad y/o paternidad combinados). Hiperónimos: afín, consanguíneo. Relacionados: agnación, agnado, cognado, parentesco, maternidad. 2.
Cognates are words that have a common origin ( source ). They may happen in a language or in a group of languages. 'composite', 'composition' and 'compost' are cognates in the English language, derived from the same root in Latin 'componere' meaning 'to put together'.