An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language/Kinn

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An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language, K (1891)
by Friedrich Kluge, translated by John Francis Davis
Kinn
Friedrich Kluge2511747An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language, K — Kinn1891John Francis Davis

Kinn, n., ‘chin,’ from the equiv. MidHG. kin, kinne, OHG. chinni, n. (also ‘jaw’). The older meaning, ‘cheek’ (Goth. kinnus, f., ‘cheek’), has been preserved in Kinnbein, ‘cheek-bone,’ in OHG. chinnizan, MidHG. kinnezan, ‘molar tooth,’ OHG. kinnibaccho, ‘jawbone’; comp. AS. čin, E. chin, AS. činbân, E. chin-bone, ModDu. kin, f., ‘chin’; OIc. kinn, ‘cheek.’ Comp. Gr. γένυς, f., ‘chin, jaw, jawbone,’ also ‘edge of an axe, axe,’ γένειον, n., ‘chin, jaw,’ γενείας, f., ‘chin, beard’; Lat. gena, ‘cheek,’ dentes genuini, ‘molar teeth’; Ir. gin, ‘mouth’; Sans. hánu-s, f., ‘jaw,’ hanavýa, ‘jawbone.’ Hence the meaning varies considerably between cheek, jaw, chin; the prim. sense of the root gen in this term cannot be ascertained. On account of the Gr. meaning ‘axe’ some deduce the word from a root gen, ‘to cut to pieces.’