Possibly an irregular derivation from the same root askamala[1] (for them ~mm variation, comparehämmentää <hämätä). Alternatively, borrowed fromProto-Germanic*skamō (compare dialectalkamo), or from variant*skammō (whenceOld Norseskǫmm).[2]
kammo
| Inflection ofkammo (Kotus type 1/valo, no gradation) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| nominative | kammo | kammot | |
| genitive | kammon | kammojen | |
| partitive | kammoa | kammoja | |
| illative | kammoon | kammoihin | |
| singular | plural | ||
| nominative | kammo | kammot | |
| accusative | nom. | kammo | kammot |
| gen. | kammon | ||
| genitive | kammon | kammojen | |
| partitive | kammoa | kammoja | |
| inessive | kammossa | kammoissa | |
| elative | kammosta | kammoista | |
| illative | kammoon | kammoihin | |
| adessive | kammolla | kammoilla | |
| ablative | kammolta | kammoilta | |
| allative | kammolle | kammoille | |
| essive | kammona | kammoina | |
| translative | kammoksi | kammoiksi | |
| abessive | kammotta | kammoitta | |
| instructive | — | kammoin | |
| comitative | See the possessive forms below. | ||