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From Proto-Indo-European*ḱeym-(“village, home”) (whence also saime(“family, household”), q.v.), from *ḱey-, *ḱoy-(“to be located; camp; abode”); the original meaning of ciems was thus “camp, encampment.” A parallel form *kaims (> kaimiņš(“neighbor”), q.v.) also existed. Since Proto-Indo-European *ḱ should yield Latvian *š > s, not c, it has been suggested that ciems and all its Baltic cognates descend from Proto-Indo-European*kʷyeh₁-(“piece, quiet”), or result from a borrowing, from Proto-Germanic*haimaz(“village”); but there are rather many Baltic and Slavic words with irregular reflexes of *ḱ, which suggest dialectal differences or parallel forms (*ḱey-/*key-) already in Proto-Indo-European. Cognates include Lithuaniankiẽmas(“yard, rural house, village”), kaímas(“village”), Old Prussiancaymis(“village”), Sudovianaucima(“village”), Proto-Germanic*haimaz(“house, village”) (Gothic𐌷𐌰𐌹𐌼𐍃(haims, “village”), Old High Germanheim(“dwelling, house”), GermanHeim, Englishhome), Ancient Greekκώμη(kṓmē, “village”) (compare κεῖμαι(keîmai, “to lie down”))[1]