English Language & Usage Asked on July 30, 2021
I am under the impression that both coterminous and conterminous have exactly the same meaning. There was a remark that Latin purists prefer conterminous. Why?
Is there any significant difference between the two? Do co- and con- have same effect on words?
I am looking for any additional information about these two words which would help me understand them better.
Yes, conterminous and coterminous both mean "to share a boundary".
According to the entries for co- and con-, below, co- is an Anglicising of con-, which is possibly why Latin purists prefer con-
In this instance co- and con- both mean together or with.
in Latin, the form of com- in compounds with stems beginning in vowels and h- and gn- (see com-). Taken in English from 17c. as a living prefix meaning “together, mutually, in common,” and used promiscuously with native words and Latin-derived words not beginning with vowels, sometimes even with words already having it (e.g. co-conspiritor).
prefix meaning "together, with," sometimes merely intensive; the form of com- used in Latin before consonants except -b-, -p-, -l-, -m-, or -r-. In native English formations, co- tends to be used where Latin would use con- (e.g. costar).
Correct answer by Matt E. Эллен on July 30, 2021
"Con-" has the meaning of :
used with certain words to add a notion similar to those conveyed by with, together, or joint congenial, congregation, console, consonant, construct, converge, etc.
It has the same meaning as "co-", which means:
together; mutually; jointly
"Conterminous" and "Coterminous" do mean the same.
Answered by Thursagen on July 30, 2021
Dictionary.com disagrees with the currently accepted answer. It lists "coterminous" as one of the possible meanings of "conterminous", but also two other meanings.
Its definitions of "coterminous":
Its definitions of "conterminous":
Indeed, the National Geographic Style Guide says to use "conterminous" for the 48 contiguous states of the U.S.; that fits with definition 1 for "conterminous" and not with either of the definitions for "coterminous".
Answered by joriki on July 30, 2021
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