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  • 41 τρίφθογγος

    τρίφθογγος
    a triple vowel-sound: fem nom sg

    Morphologia Graeca > τρίφθογγος

  • 42 cent

    c black cent [sɑ̃]
    1. adjective
       a. ( = 100) a hundred
    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
    ► When cent is preceded by a plural number s is added, unless another number follows.
    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
    ça coûtait cent euros et non deux cents it was one hundred euros, not two hundred
    2. masculine noun
       a. ( = monnaie) cent
    c black   b. ( = nombre) a hundred
    il y a cent contre un à parier que... it's a hundred to one that...
    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
    The t is pronounced before a noun beginning with a vowel sound, eg cent ans.
    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
    Le mot anglais hundred est invariable, sauf quand il signifie centaines.
    * * *

    I
    1. sɑ̃
    adjectif gén a hundred, one hundred

    deux cent trois/vingt-cinq — two hundred and three/twenty-five


    2.

    3.
    nom masculin hundred

    un cent d'œufs — a ou one hundred eggs


    4.
    pour cent locution adjective per cent

    dix à vingt pour cent or 10 à 20% des enseignants — between ten and twenty per cent of teachers

    une jupe cent pour cent or 100% coton — a hundred per cent cotton skirt

    je ne suis pas sûr à 100% — I'm not a hundred per cent sure

    ••

    être aux cent coups — (colloq) to be worried sick (colloq), to be in a state (colloq)

    attendre cent sept ans — (colloq) to wait for ages

    durer cent sept ans — (colloq) to last for ages ou forever


    II sɛnt
    nom masculin (centième de dollar, florin, rand, shilling) cent; Belg ( centième d'euro) cent
    * * *
    sɑ̃
    1. num
    a hundred, one hundred
    2. nm
    1) [euro] cent
    2) (aux USA, Canada) cent
    * * *
    I.
    A adj gén a hundred, one hundred; deux/trois cents two/three hundred; deux cents enfants two hundred children; deux cent trois/vingt-cinq two hundred and three/twenty-five; il y avait cent à deux cents personnes there were between a hundred and two hundred people; ⇒ fois, mètre, occasion, raison.
    B pron ils sont venus tous les cent all one hundred of them came.
    C nm
    1 ( quantité) hundred; un cent d'œufs/d'huîtres Comm a ou one hundred eggs/oysters; vendre/acheter au cent to sell/to buy by the hundred; c'est 12 euros le cent they're 12 euros a hundred;
    D pour cent loc adj per cent; un emprunt à sept pour cent or 7% a loan at seven per cent ou 7%; un placement à sept pour cent an investment at seven per cent ou 7%; dix à vingt pour cent or 10 à 20% des enseignants between ten and twenty per cent of teachers; une jupe cent pour cent or 100% coton a hundred per cent cotton skirt; une production cent pour cent française a hundred per cent ou 100% French production; je ne suis pas sûr/convaincu à 100% I'm not a hundred per cent sure/convinced.
    faire les cent pas to pace up and down; être aux cent coups to be worried sick, to be in a state; faire les quatre cents coups to be a real tearaway; s'ennuyer à cent sous de l'heure to be bored stiff ou to death; attendre cent sept ans to wait for ages; durer cent sept ans to last for ages ou forever.
    II.
    centL'argent et les monnaies nm (centième de dollar, florin, rand, shilling) cent.
    [sɑ̃] déterminant
    1. a ou one hundred
    2. [dans des séries]
    ————————
    [sɑ̃] nom masculin
    1. [chiffre]
    2. [centaine] hundred
    3. [centime, BANQUE] cent

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > cent

  • 43 donc

    c black donc [dɔ̃ ou dɔ̃k]
       a. ( = par conséquent) (après une digression) so
    je n'étais pas d'accord, donc j'ai refusé I didn't agree so I refused
    je disais donc que... so, as I was saying...
    j'étais donc en train de travailler quand... so, I was working when...
    c'était donc un espion ? he was a spy then?
    c black   c. (de renforcement) allons donc ! come on!
    demande-lui donc go on, ask him
    tais-toi donc ! do be quiet!
    pensez donc ! just imagine!
    comment donc ? how do you mean?
    quoi donc ? what was that?
    non mais dis donc, ne te gêne pas ! well, don't mind me!
    tiens donc ! well, well!
    et moi donc ! me too!
    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
    The c is pronounced when donc begins a phrase, comes before a vowel sound, or is being stressed.
    * * *
    dɔ̃k
    1) ( indiquant une conséquence) so, therefore; (dans une déduction logique, un syllogisme) therefore

    il avait une réunion, il n'a donc pas pu venir — he had a meeting, so he was unable to come

    je pense donc je suis — I think, therefore I am

    3) (après interruption, digression) so

    nous disions donc? — so, where were we?

    je disais donc que... — as I was saying...

    4) (pour renforcer une affirmation, un ordre, une question)

    tais-toi donc! — be quiet, will you?

    * * *
    dɔ̃k conj

    Voilà donc la solution. — So there's the solution.

    Je disais donc que... — So as I was saying,...

    Venez donc dîner à la maison. — Do come for dinner.

    * * *
    donc conj
    1 ( indiquant une conséquence) so; ( plus soutenu) therefore; (dans une déduction logique, un syllogisme) therefore; il n'y avait pas de trains, ils sont donc partis en voiture there were no trains, so they left by car; il avait une réunion, il n'a donc pas pu venir he had a meeting, so ou therefore he was unable to come; nous ne disposons que de très peu de temps, il est donc important de faire vite we've got very little time, so ou therefore we've got to act quickly; l'entreprise perdait de l'argent, il a donc décidé de vendre the company was losing money, so ou therefore he decided to sell up; je pense donc je suis I think, therefore I am; si ce n'est (pas) toi, c'est donc ton frère if it wasn't you, then it must have been your brother;
    2 ( marquant la surprise) so; c'est donc pour ça qu'il n'est pas venu! so that's why he didn't come!;
    3 (après interruption, digression) so; nous disions donc? so, where were we?; j'étais donc en train de lire, lorsque… so I was reading, when…; donc, pour en revenir au sujet qui nous intéresse,… so, to come back to the subject we're dealing with,…; je disais donc que… as I was saying…;
    4 (pour renforcer une affirmation, un ordre, une question) laissez-moi donc tranquille! leave me alone, won't you?; tais-toi donc! be quiet ou shut up, will you?; enlève donc cette casquette ridicule! come on, take off that ridiculous cap!; entrez donc! do come in!; ne dis donc pas de bêtises! don't be silly!; mais où est-il donc passé? where on earth has he gone? ; c'est donc là que tu habites! so, that's where you live then!; allons donc! come on!; tiens donc! fancy that!; quoi donc? what was that?, come again?; non mais dis donc, où est-ce que tu te crois? hey! ou say! US where do you think you are?; dis donc, où as-tu mis le dossier? hey! ou say! US, where did you put the file?; eh bien dites donc! just fancy!
    [dɔ̃k] conjonction
    1. [par conséquent] so, therefore
    je n'en sais rien, inutile donc de me le demander I don't know anything about it, so there's no use asking me
    2. [indiquant une transition] so
    nous disions donc que... so, we were saying that...
    3. [indiquant la surprise] so
    4. [renforçant une interrogation, une assertion, une injonction]
    mais qu'y a-t-il donc? what's the matter, then?
    fermez donc la porte! shut the door, will you!
    viens donc avec nous! come on, come with us!
    allons donc, vous vous trompez come on (now), you're mistaken
    allons donc, je ne te crois pas! come off it, I don't believe you!
    eh ben dis donc! well, really!
    essaie donc! go on, try!
    essaie donc pour voir! (ironique) just (you) try it!, go on then!
    tiens donc! well, well, well!
    dites donc, pour qui vous vous prenez? look here, who do you think you are?
    dis donc, à propos, tu l'as vue hier soir? oh, by the way, did you see her yesterday evening?

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > donc

  • 44 javanais

    1.
    javanaise ʒavanɛ, ɛz adjectif Javanese

    2.
    nom masculin Linguistique Javanese
    * * *
    ʒavanɛ, ɛz adj javanais, -e
    * * *
    A adj Javanese.
    B nm
    1 Ling Javanese;
    2 ( jargon) French spoken slang formed by adding ‘av’ in the middle of each syllable.
    ( féminin javanaise) [ʒavanɛ, ɛz] adjectif
    Javanais, Javanaise nom masculin, nom féminin
    javanais nom masculin
    1. [langue indonésienne] Javanese
    3. [langage incompréhensible]

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > javanais

  • 45 quand

    c black quand [kɑ̃]
    c black1. conjunction
    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
    The d is silent, except before a vowel sound, when it is pronounced t, eg quand elle m'a vu.
    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ when
    quand ce sera fini, nous irons prendre un café when it's finished we'll go and have a coffee
    sais-tu de quand était sa dernière lettre ? do you know when his last letter was written?
    quand je pense que... ! when I think that...!
    pourquoi vivre ici quand tu pourrais avoir une belle maison ? why live here when you could have a beautiful house?
    2. adverb
    quand pars-tu ?
    quand est-ce que tu pars ?
    tu pars quand ? when are you leaving?
    c'est pour quand ? (devoir) when is it for? ; (rendez-vous) when is it? ; (naissance) when is it to be?
    ça date de quand ? (événement) when did it take place? ; (lettre) when was it written?
    * * *
    Note: when traduisant quand conjonction ne peut pas être suivi du futur: quand il aura terminé = when he has finished; quand je serai guérie, j'irai te voir = when I'm better, I'll come and see you
    kɑ̃, kɑ̃t
    1.
    1) ( lorsque) when

    quand il arrivera, vous lui annoncerez la nouvelle — when he gets here, you can tell him the news

    quand il prend son poste en 1980, la situation est déjà catastrophique — when he took up his post in 1980, the situation was already catastrophic

    emporte une pomme pour quand tu auras faim — (colloq) take an apple with you in case you get hungry

    3) ( toutes les fois que) whenever

    quand il pleut plus de trois jours la cave est inondée — whenever it rains for more than three days, the cellar floods

    son attitude change quand il s'agit de son fils — his/her attitude changes when it comes to his/her son

    4) ( alors que) when
    5) ( même si) even if

    quand (bien même) la terre s'écroulerait, il continuerait à dormir — he'd sleep through an earthquake


    2.
    adverbe when

    quand arrive-t-il/viendras-tu? — when does he arrive/will you come?

    ça date de quand cette histoire? — (colloq) when did all this happen?

    à quand (colloq) la semaine de 30 heures? — when will we get a 30-hour working week?


    3.
    quand même locution adverbiale still

    ils ne veulent pas de moi, mais j'irai quand même! — they don't want me, but I'm still going!

    elle est quand même bête (colloq) d'avoir fait ça! — it's really stupid of her to have done that!

    quand même (colloq), tu exagères! — ( tu n'es pas objectif) come on, you're exaggerating!; ( tu vas trop loin) come on, that's going too far!

    tu ne vas pas faire ça quand même? — (colloq) you're not going to do that, are you?

    * * *
    kɑ̃
    1. conj
    1) when

    Quand je serai riche, j'achèterai une belle maison. — When I'm rich, I'll buy a nice house.

    quand même (= pourtant) — nevertheless, (= tout de même) all the same

    Je ne voulais pas de dessert, mais j'en ai mangé quand même. — I didn't want any dessert, but I had some all the same.

    C'est quand même un sacré joueur. — All the same, he's a great player.

    2. adv

    Il ne m'a pas dit quand il partirait. — He didn't tell me when he was going to leave.

    * * *
    When traduisant quand conjonction ne peut pas être suivi du futur: quand il aura terminé = when he has finished; quand je serai guérie, j'irai te voir = when I'm better, I'll come and see you.
    A conj
    1 ( lorsque) when; quand il arrivera, vous lui annoncerez la nouvelle when he gets here, you can tell him the news; appelez-moi quand la voiture sera prête call me when the car is ready; quand il arriva sur place, il comprit when he got there, he understood; quand il prend son poste en 1980, la situation est déjà catastrophique when he took up his post in 1980, the situation was already catastrophic; quand il termine son repas, nous partons when he has finished his meal, we're going; tu auras ton dessert quand tu auras fini ta viande you'll have your dessert when you have finished your meat; quand il est fatigué et qu'il boit when he is tired and he drinks; cela date de quand j'étais étudiante it goes back to when I was a student, it goes back to my student days; emporte une pomme pour quand tu auras faim take an apple with you in case you get hungry;
    2 ( valeur exclamative) quand je pense que ma fille va avoir dix ans! to think that my daughter's almost ten (years old)!; quand je vous le disais! I told you so!;
    3 ( toutes les fois que) whenever; quand elle doit prendre l'avion elle est toujours très nerveuse whenever she has to fly she gets nervous; quand il pleut plus de trois jours la cave est inondée whenever it rains for more than three days, the cellar floods; quand il se mettait en colère, tout le monde tremblait everybody shook with fear whenever he got angry; quand il s'agit de boire un verre, il ne dit jamais non when he's offered a drink, he never refuses it; son attitude change quand il s'agit de son fils his attitude changes when it comes to his son; savoir sévir quand il faut to be strict when necessary;
    4 ( alors que) fml when; pourquoi partir quand tout nous incite à rester? why leave when there's every reason to stay?; tu oses te plaindre quand des gens meurent de faim! you dare to complain when there are people starving!; elle l'a laissé tomber quand elle aurait dû l'aider she let him down when she should have helped him;
    5 ( même si) fml even if; quand (bien même) la terre s'écroulerait, il continuerait à dormir even if the earth opened up, he'd carry on GB ou keep on sleeping; ‘tu ne vas pas faire ça?’-‘et quand bien même?’ ‘you're not going to do that?’-‘what if I do?’
    B adv when; quand arrive-t-il/viendras-tu? when does he arrive/will you come?; quand est-ce que tu reviens?, tu reviens quand? when are you coming back?; je ne sais pas quand elle arrivera I don't know when she'll get here; depuis quand habitez-vous ici? how long have you been living here?; ça date de quand cette histoire? when did all this happen?; de quand date votre dernière réunion? when was your last meeting?; de quand est la lettre? what is the date on the letter?; je me demande pour quand est prévue la publication du dictionnaire I wonder when the dictionary is due to be published; c'est prévu pour quand? when is it scheduled for?; c'est pour quand le bébé? when is the baby due?; à quand la semaine de 30 heures? when will we have the 30-hour week?
    C quand même loc adv ils étaient occupés mais ils nous ont quand même rendu visite they were busy but even so they came to visit us; ils ne veulent pas de moi, mais j'irai quand même! they don't want me, but I'll go all the same; elle est quand même bête d'avoir fait ça! it's really stupid of her to have done that!; quand même, tu as vu ça? really, did you see that?; quand même, tu exagères! ( tu n'es pas objectif) come on, you're exaggerating!; ( tu vas trop loin) come on, that's going too far!; tu ne vas pas faire ça quand même? you're not going to do that, are you?
    [kɑ̃] conjonction
    1. [lorsque] when
    quand le vin est tiré, il faut le boire (proverbe) you've made your bed and must lie in it
    2. [alors que] when
    3. [introduisant une hypothèse] even if
    et quand ce serait, j'ai bien le droit de rêver even if that is the case, I'm allowed to dream, aren't I?
    ————————
    [kɑ̃] adverbe
    c'est pour quand, ce mariage? when is this wedding going to happen?
    ————————
    quand bien même locution conjonctive
    ————————
    quand même locution conjonctive
    ————————
    quand même locution adverbiale
    1. [malgré tout] all the same, even so
    c'était quand même bien it was still good, it was good all the same
    je pense qu'il ne viendra pas, mais je l'inviterai quand même I don't think he'll come but I'll invite him all the same
    2. [en intensif]

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > quand

  • 46 vingt

    c black vingt [vɛ̃]
    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
    When vingt is followed by a vowel sound, and in the numbers from 22 to 29, the final t is pronounced.
    * * *
    vɛ̃, vɛ̃t
    1.
    adjectif invariable twenty

    2.
    pronom twenty

    j'ai eu vingt sur vingt à mon devoir d'histoire — ≈ I got full marks GB ou full credit US for my history paper

    * * *
    vɛ̃ num

    Elle a vingt ans. — She's twenty.

    à vingt heures — at 8 p.m.

    le vingt février — the twentieth of February, February twentieth

    vingt-quatre heures sur vingt-quatre — twenty-four hours a day, round the clock

    * * *
    A adj inv twenty.
    B pron twenty; vingt sur vingt twenty out of twenty; j'ai eu vingt sur vingt à mon devoir d'histoire I got full marks GB ou full credit US for my history paper.
    [vɛ̃] déterminant
    ah, si j'avais encore mes jambes/mon cœur de vingt ans! if only I still had the legs/the heart of a twenty year-old!
    vingt dieux! (familier & vieilli) : RAPPEL-ADRESSE/> dieux, la belle fille! strewth (UK) ou Lord (US), what a beauty!
    ne touche pas à ça, vingt dieux! leave that alone, for God's sake!
    voir aussi link=cinq cinq
    ————————
    [vɛ̃] nom masculin invariable

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > vingt

  • 47 e

    abbr (= est) E (= east)
    * * *
    e s.f. o m. ( quinta lettera dell'alfabeto) e (pl. es, e's) // (tel.) e come Empoli, E for Edward (o amer. e for Easy) // (geogr.) E, East.
    e, ed cong.
    1 ( con valore coordinativo) and: mio padre e mia madre, my father and mother; tu ed io, you and I; il bene e il male, good and evil; il sole, la luna e le stelle, the sun, the moon and the stars; è una ragazza simpatica e cordiale, she's a pleasant and friendly girl (o she's a pleasant, friendly girl); una maglietta bianca e blu, a blue and white top; salutò e uscì, he said goodbye and left; la stanza era calda e accogliente, the room was warm and welcoming // e i bambini?, what about the children? // e... e..., (sia... sia...) both... and...: hanno arrestato e il costruttore e l'ingegnere responsabile dei lavori, both the builder and the engineer in charge of works were arrested; e i cinesi e i giapponesi..., both the Chinese and the Japanese...; sono problemi che coinvolgono e il pubblico e il privato, they are problems that involve both private and public life // Con valore rafforzativo o pleonastico: tutti e due, both; tutti e tre, all three; il lavoro è bell'e fatto, the job's well and truly done; se n'è bell'e andato, (fam.) he upped and went
    2 ( con valore avversativo) but: ha detto che avrebbe telefonato, e non l'ha fatto, he said he'd phone, but he didn't; il concerto si doveva tenere oggi, ed è stato rimandato, the concert was to be held today, but it has been postponed
    3 (con valore esortativo; in inglese spesso non si traduce): e falla finita una buona volta!, stop it, once and for all!; e sbrigati!, come on, then!
    4 ( nelle addizioni) and: sei e due (fa) otto, six and two make (s) eight.
    * * *
    = e
    * * *
    e
    /e/
    Come e in italiano, anche and in inglese funziona essenzialmente da connettivo con valore coordinativo; la connessione stabilita da e / and può essere all'interno della frase ( Bill e Mark sono amici = Bill and Mark are friends) oppure tra frasi ( Bill è in ritardo e Mark lo sta aspettando da mezz'ora = Bill is late and Mark has been waiting for him for half an hour). - Si noti che, quando e unisce due aggettivi che si riferiscono a un unico sostantivo, tale congiunzione non si traduce in inglese: un uomo alto e robusto = a tall strong man. ⇒ 13, 20, 21, 22, 26
    (also ed before a vowel sound)
     1 (con valore coordinativo) and; mio padre e mia madre my father and my mother; una gonna rossa e bianca a red and white skirt; alto e forte tall and strong; un uomo alto e robusto a tall strong man; tutti e due both; è caduto e si è rotto la gamba he fell and broke his leg; e io risposi... so I replied...; e se andassimo al cinema? how o what about going to the cinema? e io allora? what about me, then? io non lo conosco, e tu? I don't know him, do you? e allora? so what?
     2 (nelle ore, unità di misura) le due e mezza half past two BE, two thirty; sei chili e mezzo six and a half kilos; un metro e sessanta one metre sixty
     4 (con valore enfatico) e muoviti! get moving, then! e smettetela! do stop it!

    Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > e

  • 48 o

    abbr (= ovest) W (= west)
    * * *
    o1 s.f. o m. ( quindicesima lettera dell'alfabeto) o (pl. os, oes, o's) // (tel.) o come Otranto, o for Oliver (o amer. o for Oboe) // tondo come l'o di Giotto, round as Giotto's o.
    o2 cong.
    1 ( oppure) or: prendi tè o caffè?, will you have tea or coffee?; quale vuoi, questo o quello?, which do you want, this one or that one?; ti telefonerò o verrò di persona, I'll call you or come in person; ci vediamo lunedì o martedì, see you Monday or Tuesday; telefona due o tre volte alla settimana, he phones two or three times a week; venite o non venite?, are you coming or not?; hai capito () o no?, have you understood, or haven't you? // adesso o mai più, now or never // è questione di vita o di morte, it's a matter of life and (o or) death
    2 o... o..., (correl.) either... or...: devi scegliere o questo o quello, you must choose either this one or that one; ''Che macchina hai intenzione di comprare?'' ''O una Fiat o una Ford'', ''What make of car are you going to buy?'' ''Either a Fiat or a Ford''; qualcuno di voi me l'ha detto, o Franco o tu, one of you told me, either Frank or you; o ti decidi a studiare, o ti trovi un lavoro, you either decide to study or you get yourself a job // o l'uno o l'altro, either one or the other; either of them: o l'uno o l'altro ( di loro) si farà vivo prima o poi, either one or the other (of them) will turn up sooner or later; ''Che colore preferisce?'' ''O l'uno o l'altro di questi due andrà bene'', ''Which colour do you prefer?'' ''Either of them will do'' // o la borsa o la vita!, your money or your life! // o la va o la spacca, make or break
    3 (sia che... o che...) whether... or...: che tu acconsenta o no..., whether you agree or not...; lo sapesse o non lo sapesse, avrebbe fatto meglio a tacere, whether he knew or not, he would have done better to keep quiet
    4 ( ovvero, ossia) or: le isole Eolie, o Lipari, the Aeolian, or Lipari islands; l'ape maschio, o fuco, the male bee, or drone; la sismologia, o scienza che studia i movimenti tellurici, seismology, or the science of earthquakes
    5 ( altrimenti) or (else); otherwise: sbrigatevi, o perderete il treno, hurry up, or (else) you'll miss the train; ti conviene confessare, o saranno guai, you had better own up, otherwise there will be trouble.
    o3 inter.
    1 ( rafforzativo di un'esclamazione) oh!; (poet.) o!: o povero me!, oh, dear!; o Dio, che tragedia!, good Lord, what a tragedy!
    2 (enfatico o retorico; in ingl. non si traduce): o amati concittadini..., my dear compatriots...
    3 (fam.) (per chiamare qlcu.) hey: o voi, laggiù!, hey you, out there!
    o4 inter. (region., spesso pleonastico) o che ti credevi, che ci sarei cascato?, did you actually think I'd fall for it?
    * * *
    I [o]
    1) (gen) or

    o... o... — either... or...

    sono decisa: o lui o nessuno — I've made up my mind: it's him or nobody

    2) (altrimenti) (or) else
    II
    1) oh!
    2) (fam : per chiamare) hey!
    * * *
    = o
    * * *
    o1
    /o/
    (also od before a vowel sound)
     1 or; con o senza zucchero? with or without sugar? vieni sì o no? will you or won't you be coming? che ti piaccia o no whether you like it or not; non sapevo se ridere o piangere I didn't know whether to laugh or cry; (valutazione approssimativa) una o due volte alla settimana once or twice a week; (come correzione o spiegazione) la conoscevo, o almeno credevo di conoscerla! I knew her, or at least I thought I did!
     2 (correlativo) o... o... either... or...; o l'uno o l'altro either one or the other; o lui o io it's either him or me
     3 (altrimenti) or, otherwise; fallo adesso o te ne pentirai! do it now or you will be sorry! andiamo, o perderemo l'aereo let's go now, otherwise we'll miss our flight.
    ————————
    o2
    /o/
    (per invocare) o; o Signore, aiutami tu! good Lord, help me!

    Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > o

  • 49 syllable

    [ˈsɪləbl] noun
    a word or part of a word usually containing a vowel sound:

    "Cheese" has one syllable, "but-ter" two and "mar-ga-rine" three.

    مَقْطَع

    Arabic-English dictionary > syllable

  • 50 τρίφθογγος

    A a triple vowel-sound, Tz.H.12.242: as Adj. τρίφθογγος, ον, having three voices, PMag.Par.1.2820.

    Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > τρίφθογγος

  • 51 na

    English Definition: see na1 see na2 see na3
    --------
    English Definition: (adv) now; already
    Notes: After nouns or pronouns, acts as an emphatic marker, as AKO NA, It's my turn (to do something) or I'll do it (instead of someone else); SI MARIA NA, Let it be Maria's turn. After verbs: If in the past tense form, denotes completion of action expressible
    --------
    English Definition: (lig) connects modifier and word modified. Takes the form --NG when the word it follows ends in a vowel sound, as MABAIT NA BATA or BATANG MABAIT, good child.
    --------
    English Definition: (part) with SA/KAY, marks nouns indicating position, location, possession of something

    Tagalog-English dictionary > na

  • 52 D

    D, d (n. indecl., sometimes f. sc. littera), the flat dental mute, corresponding in character and sound to the English d and the Greek D, was the fourth letter of the Latin alphabet, and was called de: Ter. Maur. p. 2385 P., Auson. Idyll. 12, de Litt. Monos. 14. But at the end of a syllable, or after another consonant, its sound was sharpened, so that the grammarians often discuss the question whether d or t should be written, especially in conjunctions and prepositions. Illa quoque servata est a multis differentia, ut ad cum esset praepositio, d litteram, cum autem conjunctio, t acciperet (Quint. 1, 7, 5; cf. id. 1, 4, 16). Hence we may infer that some disputed this distinction, and that the sounds of ad and at must at least have been very similar (cf. also Terent. Scaur. p. 2250, Vel. Long. p. 2230 sq., Cassiod. p. 2287, 2291). Thus also aput, it, quit, quot, aliut, set, haut are found for apud, id, quid, quod, aliud, sed, haud. It would appear from the remarks of these authors that the last two words in particular, having a proclitic character, while they distinctly retained the d sound before an initial vowel in the following word, were pronounced before a consonant almost as set, haut (Mar. Vict. p. 2462 P., Vel. Long. l. l. v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 191 sq.). The use of t for d in the middle of a word, as Alexenter for Alexander, atnato for adnato, is very rare (cf. Wordsworth, Fragm. p. 486 sq.). On the other hand, the use of d for t, which sometimes appears in MSS. and inscrr., as ed, capud, essed, inquid (all of which occur in the Cod. palimps. of Cic. Rep.), adque, quodannis, sicud, etc., fecid, reliquid, etc. (all in inscriptions after the Augustan period), is to be ascribed to a later phonetic softening (cf. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 191 sq.).
    II.
    As an initial, the letter d, in pure Latin words, suffers only a vowel after it; the single consonantal compound dr being found only in borrowed words, such as drama, Drusus, Druidae, etc., and in the two onomatopees drenso and drindio. Accordingly, the d of the initial dv, from du, was rejected, and the remaining v either retained unaltered (as in v iginti for du iginti; cf. triginta) or changed into b (as in b ellum, b is, b onus, for du ellum, du is, du onus; v. those words and the letter B). So too in and after the 4th century A.D., di before vowels was pronounced like j (cf. J ovis for Dj ovis, and J anus for Di anus); and hence, as the Greek di ( di) passed into dz, i. e. z (as in z a for d ia, and z eta for di aeta), we sometimes find the same name written in two or three ways, as Diabolenus, Jabolenus, Zabolenus; Jadera, Diadora, Zara. In many Greek words, however, which originally began with a y sound, d was prefixed by an instinctive effort to avoid a disagreeable utterance, just as in English the initial j has regularly assumed the sound of dj: thus Gr. zugon, i. e. diugon = L. jugum; and in such cases the d sound has been prefixed in Greek, not lost in Latin and other languages (v. Curt. Griech. Etym. p. 608 sq.).b. As a medial, d before most consonants undergoes assimilation; v. ad, no. II.; assum, init., and cf. iccirco, quippiam, quicquam, for idcirco, quidpiam, quidquam; and in contractions like cette from cedite, pelluviae from pediluviae, sella from sedela. In contractions, however, the d is sometimes dropped and a compensation effected by lengthening the preceding vowel, as scāla for scand-la. D before endings which begin with s was suppressed, as pes from ped-s, lapis from lapid-s, frons from frond-s, rasi from radsi, risi from rid-si, lusi from lud-si, clausi from claud-si; but in the second and third roots of cedo, and in the third roots of some other verbs, d is assimilated, as cessi, cessum, fossum, etc. D is also omitted before s in composition when another consonant follows the s, as ascendo, aspicio, asto, astringo, and so also before the nasal gn in agnatus, agnitus, and agnosco, from gnatus, etc.: but in other combinations it is assimilated, as assentio, acclamo, accresco; affligo, affrico; agglomero, aggrego; applico, approbo, etc. In tentum, from tendo, d is dropped to avoid the combination ndt or ntt, since euphony forbids a consonant to be doubled after another.g. Final d stood only in ad, apud, sed, and in the neuter pronouns quid, quod, illud, istud, and aliud, anciently alid. Otherwise, the ending d was considered barbarous, Prisc. p. 686 P.
    III.
    The letter d represents regularly an original Indo-Germanic d, in Greek d, but which in German becomes z, in Gothic t, and in Anglo-Saxon t: cf. Gr. hêdomai, Sanscr. svad, Germ. süss, Angl.-Sax. svēte (sweet), with Lat. suadeo; domare with Gr. damaô, Germ. zähmen, Eng. tame; domus with demô, timber, O. H. Germ. zimber; duo with duô, zwei, two. But it is also interchanged with other sounds, and thus sometimes represents—
    1.
    An original t: mendax from mentior; quadraginta, quadra, etc., from quatuor.—
    2.
    An original r: ar and ad; apur or apor and apud; meridies and medidies, audio and auris; cf. arbiter, from ad-beto; arcesso for ad-cesso.—
    3.
    An original l: adeps, Gr. aleipha; dacrima and lacrima, dingua and lingua; cf. on the contrary, olere for odere, consilium and considere, Ulixes from Odusseus (v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 223).—
    4.
    An original s: Claudius, from the Sabine Clausus, medius and misos; and, on the contrary, rosa and rhodon. —
    5.
    A Greek th: fides, pistis; gaudere, gêtheô; vad-i-monium (from va-d-s, vadis), aethlon.
    IV.
    In the oldest period of the language d was the ending of the ablat. sing. and of the adverbs which were originally ablatives (cf. Ritschl, Neue Plaut. Excur. I.; Brix ad Plaut. Trin. Prol. 10): pu CNANDO, MARID, DICTATORED, IN ALTOD MARID, NAVALED PRAEDAD on the Col. Rostr.; DE SENATVOS SENTENTIAD (thrice) IN OQVOLTOD, IN POPLICOD, IN PREIVATOD, IN COVENTIONID, and the adverbs SVPRAD SCRIPTVM EST (thrice), EXSTRAD QVAM SEI, and even EXSTRAD VRBEM, in S. C. de Bacch. So intra-d, ultra-d, citra-d, contra-d, infra-d, supra-d; contro-d, intro-d, etc.; and probably interea-d, postea-d. Here too belongs, no doubt, the adverb FACILVMED, found in the last-mentioned inscription. But this use of the d became antiquated during the 3d century B.C., and is not found at all in any inscription after 186 B. C. Plautus seems to have used or omitted it at will (Ritschl, Neue Plaut. Excurs. p. 18: Corss. Ausspr. 1, 197; 2, 1008).
    2.
    D final was also anciently found—
    a.
    In the accus. sing. of the personal pronouns med, ted, sed: INTER SED CONIOVRASE and INTER SED DEDISE, for inter se conjuravisse and inter se dedisse, in the S. C. de Bacch. This usage was retained, at least as a license of verse, when the next word began with a vowel, even in the time of Plautus. But in the classic period this d no longer appears. —
    b.
    In the imperative mood;

    as estod,

    Fest. p. 230. The Oscan language retained this ending (v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 206).—
    c.
    In the preposition se-, originally identical with the conjunction sed (it is retained in the compound seditio); also in red-, prod-, antid-, postid-, etc. ( redire, prodire, etc.); and in these words, too, it is a remnant of the ancient characteristic of the ablative (v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 200 sq.; Roby, Lat. Gr. 1, 49).
    V.
    As an abbreviation, D usually stands for the praenomen Decimus; also for Deus, Divus, Dominus, Decurio, etc.; over epitaphs, D. M. = Diis Manibus; over temple inscriptions, D. O. M. = Deo Optimo Maxumo; in the titles of the later emperors, D. N. = Dominus Noster, and DD. NN. = Domini Nostri. Before dates of letters, D signified dabam, and also dies; hence, a. d. = ante diem; in offerings to the gods, D. D. = dono or donum dedit; D. D. D. = dat, dicat, dedicat, etc. Cf. Orell. Inscr. II. p. 457 sq.
    The Romans denoted the number 500 by D; but the character was then regarded, not as a letter, but as half of the original Tuscan numeral (or CI[C ]) for 1000.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > D

  • 53 d

    D, d (n. indecl., sometimes f. sc. littera), the flat dental mute, corresponding in character and sound to the English d and the Greek D, was the fourth letter of the Latin alphabet, and was called de: Ter. Maur. p. 2385 P., Auson. Idyll. 12, de Litt. Monos. 14. But at the end of a syllable, or after another consonant, its sound was sharpened, so that the grammarians often discuss the question whether d or t should be written, especially in conjunctions and prepositions. Illa quoque servata est a multis differentia, ut ad cum esset praepositio, d litteram, cum autem conjunctio, t acciperet (Quint. 1, 7, 5; cf. id. 1, 4, 16). Hence we may infer that some disputed this distinction, and that the sounds of ad and at must at least have been very similar (cf. also Terent. Scaur. p. 2250, Vel. Long. p. 2230 sq., Cassiod. p. 2287, 2291). Thus also aput, it, quit, quot, aliut, set, haut are found for apud, id, quid, quod, aliud, sed, haud. It would appear from the remarks of these authors that the last two words in particular, having a proclitic character, while they distinctly retained the d sound before an initial vowel in the following word, were pronounced before a consonant almost as set, haut (Mar. Vict. p. 2462 P., Vel. Long. l. l. v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 191 sq.). The use of t for d in the middle of a word, as Alexenter for Alexander, atnato for adnato, is very rare (cf. Wordsworth, Fragm. p. 486 sq.). On the other hand, the use of d for t, which sometimes appears in MSS. and inscrr., as ed, capud, essed, inquid (all of which occur in the Cod. palimps. of Cic. Rep.), adque, quodannis, sicud, etc., fecid, reliquid, etc. (all in inscriptions after the Augustan period), is to be ascribed to a later phonetic softening (cf. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 191 sq.).
    II.
    As an initial, the letter d, in pure Latin words, suffers only a vowel after it; the single consonantal compound dr being found only in borrowed words, such as drama, Drusus, Druidae, etc., and in the two onomatopees drenso and drindio. Accordingly, the d of the initial dv, from du, was rejected, and the remaining v either retained unaltered (as in v iginti for du iginti; cf. triginta) or changed into b (as in b ellum, b is, b onus, for du ellum, du is, du onus; v. those words and the letter B). So too in and after the 4th century A.D., di before vowels was pronounced like j (cf. J ovis for Dj ovis, and J anus for Di anus); and hence, as the Greek di ( di) passed into dz, i. e. z (as in z a for d ia, and z eta for di aeta), we sometimes find the same name written in two or three ways, as Diabolenus, Jabolenus, Zabolenus; Jadera, Diadora, Zara. In many Greek words, however, which originally began with a y sound, d was prefixed by an instinctive effort to avoid a disagreeable utterance, just as in English the initial j has regularly assumed the sound of dj: thus Gr. zugon, i. e. diugon = L. jugum; and in such cases the d sound has been prefixed in Greek, not lost in Latin and other languages (v. Curt. Griech. Etym. p. 608 sq.).b. As a medial, d before most consonants undergoes assimilation; v. ad, no. II.; assum, init., and cf. iccirco, quippiam, quicquam, for idcirco, quidpiam, quidquam; and in contractions like cette from cedite, pelluviae from pediluviae, sella from sedela. In contractions, however, the d is sometimes dropped and a compensation effected by lengthening the preceding vowel, as scāla for scand-la. D before endings which begin with s was suppressed, as pes from ped-s, lapis from lapid-s, frons from frond-s, rasi from radsi, risi from rid-si, lusi from lud-si, clausi from claud-si; but in the second and third roots of cedo, and in the third roots of some other verbs, d is assimilated, as cessi, cessum, fossum, etc. D is also omitted before s in composition when another consonant follows the s, as ascendo, aspicio, asto, astringo, and so also before the nasal gn in agnatus, agnitus, and agnosco, from gnatus, etc.: but in other combinations it is assimilated, as assentio, acclamo, accresco; affligo, affrico; agglomero, aggrego; applico, approbo, etc. In tentum, from tendo, d is dropped to avoid the combination ndt or ntt, since euphony forbids a consonant to be doubled after another.g. Final d stood only in ad, apud, sed, and in the neuter pronouns quid, quod, illud, istud, and aliud, anciently alid. Otherwise, the ending d was considered barbarous, Prisc. p. 686 P.
    III.
    The letter d represents regularly an original Indo-Germanic d, in Greek d, but which in German becomes z, in Gothic t, and in Anglo-Saxon t: cf. Gr. hêdomai, Sanscr. svad, Germ. süss, Angl.-Sax. svēte (sweet), with Lat. suadeo; domare with Gr. damaô, Germ. zähmen, Eng. tame; domus with demô, timber, O. H. Germ. zimber; duo with duô, zwei, two. But it is also interchanged with other sounds, and thus sometimes represents—
    1.
    An original t: mendax from mentior; quadraginta, quadra, etc., from quatuor.—
    2.
    An original r: ar and ad; apur or apor and apud; meridies and medidies, audio and auris; cf. arbiter, from ad-beto; arcesso for ad-cesso.—
    3.
    An original l: adeps, Gr. aleipha; dacrima and lacrima, dingua and lingua; cf. on the contrary, olere for odere, consilium and considere, Ulixes from Odusseus (v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 223).—
    4.
    An original s: Claudius, from the Sabine Clausus, medius and misos; and, on the contrary, rosa and rhodon. —
    5.
    A Greek th: fides, pistis; gaudere, gêtheô; vad-i-monium (from va-d-s, vadis), aethlon.
    IV.
    In the oldest period of the language d was the ending of the ablat. sing. and of the adverbs which were originally ablatives (cf. Ritschl, Neue Plaut. Excur. I.; Brix ad Plaut. Trin. Prol. 10): pu CNANDO, MARID, DICTATORED, IN ALTOD MARID, NAVALED PRAEDAD on the Col. Rostr.; DE SENATVOS SENTENTIAD (thrice) IN OQVOLTOD, IN POPLICOD, IN PREIVATOD, IN COVENTIONID, and the adverbs SVPRAD SCRIPTVM EST (thrice), EXSTRAD QVAM SEI, and even EXSTRAD VRBEM, in S. C. de Bacch. So intra-d, ultra-d, citra-d, contra-d, infra-d, supra-d; contro-d, intro-d, etc.; and probably interea-d, postea-d. Here too belongs, no doubt, the adverb FACILVMED, found in the last-mentioned inscription. But this use of the d became antiquated during the 3d century B.C., and is not found at all in any inscription after 186 B. C. Plautus seems to have used or omitted it at will (Ritschl, Neue Plaut. Excurs. p. 18: Corss. Ausspr. 1, 197; 2, 1008).
    2.
    D final was also anciently found—
    a.
    In the accus. sing. of the personal pronouns med, ted, sed: INTER SED CONIOVRASE and INTER SED DEDISE, for inter se conjuravisse and inter se dedisse, in the S. C. de Bacch. This usage was retained, at least as a license of verse, when the next word began with a vowel, even in the time of Plautus. But in the classic period this d no longer appears. —
    b.
    In the imperative mood;

    as estod,

    Fest. p. 230. The Oscan language retained this ending (v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 206).—
    c.
    In the preposition se-, originally identical with the conjunction sed (it is retained in the compound seditio); also in red-, prod-, antid-, postid-, etc. ( redire, prodire, etc.); and in these words, too, it is a remnant of the ancient characteristic of the ablative (v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 200 sq.; Roby, Lat. Gr. 1, 49).
    V.
    As an abbreviation, D usually stands for the praenomen Decimus; also for Deus, Divus, Dominus, Decurio, etc.; over epitaphs, D. M. = Diis Manibus; over temple inscriptions, D. O. M. = Deo Optimo Maxumo; in the titles of the later emperors, D. N. = Dominus Noster, and DD. NN. = Domini Nostri. Before dates of letters, D signified dabam, and also dies; hence, a. d. = ante diem; in offerings to the gods, D. D. = dono or donum dedit; D. D. D. = dat, dicat, dedicat, etc. Cf. Orell. Inscr. II. p. 457 sq.
    The Romans denoted the number 500 by D; but the character was then regarded, not as a letter, but as half of the original Tuscan numeral (or CI[C ]) for 1000.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > d

  • 54 C

    C, c, n. indecl., or f., the third letter of the Latin alphabet; corresponded originally in sound to the Greek G (which in inscrr., esp. in the Doric, was frequently written like the Latin C; v. O. Müll. Etrusk. 2, p. 295); hence the old orthography: LECIONES, MACISTRATOS, EXFOCIONT, [pu]CNANDOD, PVC[nad], CARTACINIENSI, upon the Columna rostrata, for legiones, magistratos, effugiunt, pugnando, pugnā, Carthaginiensi; and the prænomina Gaius and Gnaeus, even to the latest times, were designated by C. and Cn., while Caeso or Kaeso was written with K; cf. the letter G. Still, even as early as the time of the kings, whether through the influence of the Tuscans, among whom G sounded like K, or of the. Sabines, whose language was kindred with that of the Tuscans, the C seems to have been substituted for K; hence even Consul was designated by Cos., and K remained in use only before a, as in Kalendae; k. k. for calumniae causā, INTERKAL for intercalaris, MERK for mercatus, and in a few other republican inscrr., because by this vowel K was distinguished from Q, as in Gr. Kappa from Koppa, and in Phœnician Caph from Cuph, while C was employed like other consonants with e. Q was used at the beginning of words only when u, pronounced like v, followed, as Quirites from Cures, Tanaquil from Thanchufil, Thanchfil, ThankWil; accordingly, C everywhere took the place of Q, when that accompanying labial sound was lost, or u was used as a vowel; so in the gentile name of Maecenas Cilnius, from the Etrusk. Cvelne or Cfelne (O. Müll. Etrusk. 1, p. 414 sq.); so in coctus, cocus, alicubi, sicubi; in relicŭŭs (four syl.) for reliquus (trisyl.): AECETIA = AEQITIA, i. q. aequitas (V. AECETIA), etc., and as in the Golden Age cujus was written for quojus, and cui for quoi (corresponding to cum for quom); thus, even in the most ancient period, quor or cur was used together with [p. 257] quare, cura with quaero, curia with Quiris, as inversely inquilinus with incola, and in S. C. Bacch. OQVOLTOD = occulto. Hence, at the end of words que, as well as ce in hic, sic, istic, illic, was changed to c, as in ac for atque, nec for neque, nunc, tunc, donec for numque, tumque, dumque; and in the middle of words it might also pass into g. as in negotium and neglego, cf. necopinus. Since C thus gradually took the place of K and Q, with the single exception that our kw was throughout designated by qu, it was strange that under the emperors grammarians began again to write k instead of c before a, though even Quint. 1, 7, 10, expressed his displeasure at this; and they afterwards wrote q before u, even when no labial sound followed, as in pequnia, or merely peqnia, for pecunia; cf. the letters Q and U. About the beginning of the sixth century of the city the modified form G was introduced for the flat guttural sound, and C thenceforth regularly represented the hard sound = our K. The use of aspirates was unknown to the Romans during the first six centuries, hence the letter C also represents the Gr. X, as BACA and BACANALIBVS, for Baccha and Bacchanalibus (the single C instead of the double, as regularly in the most ancient times); cf. also schizô with scindo, and poluchroos with pulcer. But even in the time of Cicero scheda came into use for scida, and pulcher for pulcer; so also the name of the Gracchi was aspirated, as were the name Cethegus and the word triumphus, which, however, in the song of the Arval brothers, is TRIVMPVS; cf. Cic. Or. 48, 160, and the letter P. About this time the use of aspirates became so common, in imitation of Greek, that Catullus wrote upon it an epigram (84), which begins with the words: Cho mmoda dicebat, si quando commoda vellet; and in Monum. Ancyr. inchoo is used for the orig. incoho, acc. to which the ancient Romans also employed cohors for chors (v. cohors).On account of the near relationship of c and g, as given above, they are very often interchanged, esp. when connected with liquids: Cygnus, Progne, Gnidus, Gnossus, from kuknos, Proknê, Knidos, Knôssos (even when n was separated from c by a vowel, as in Saguntum for Zakunthos, or absorbed by an s, as in vigesimus and trigesimus for vicensimus and tricensimus); mulgeo for mulceo, segmen from seco, gummi for commi (kommi); gurgulio for curculio, grabatus for krabatos, so that amurca was also written for amurga, from amorgê, as inversely conger for gonger, from gongros; but also with other letters; cf. mastruca and mastruga, misceo and misgô, mugio and mukaomai, gobius and kôbios, gubernator and kubernêtês. Not less freq. is the interchange of c and t, which is noticed by Quint. Inst. 1, 11, 5, and in accordance with which, in composition, d or t before qu, except with que, became c, as acquiro, nequicquam, iccirco for idcirco, ecquis for etquis, etc. Hence is explained the rejection of c before t, as in Lutatius for Luctatius, and the arbitrariness with which many names were written with cc or tt for ct, as Vettones for Vectones; Nacca or Natta for Nacta (from the Gr. gnaptô). It would be erroneouś to infer, from the varied orthography of the names' Accius, Attius, and Actius, or Peccius, Pettius, and Pectius, a hissing pronunciation of them; for as the Romans interchange the terminations icius and itius, and the orthography fetialis and fecialis, indutiae and induciae, with one another, they also wrote Basculi or Bastuli, anclare or antlare, etc. Ci for ti does not appear till an African inscr. of the third century after Christ, and not often before Gallic inscrr. and documents of the seventh century; ti for ci is not certainly found before the end of the fourth century; and ci before a vowel does not appear to have been pronounced as sh, except provincially, before the sixth or seventh century; cf. Roby, Gr. bk. 1, ch. 7; and so in gen., Corss. Ausspr. I. p. 33 sqq. C is sometimes interchanged with p: columba, palumbes; coquus, popa, popina (cf. in Gr. koteros; Sanscr. katara; poteros; Lat. uter). C is sometimes dropped in the middle of a word: luna for luc-na, lumen for luc-men; so also at the beginning of a word: uter for cuter; Sanscr. katara, v. supra.As an abbreviation, C designates Gaius, and reversed, O, Gaia; cf. Quint. 1, 7, 28. As a numeral, C = centum, and upon voting tablets = condemno, Ascon. Cic. Div. in Caecil. 7, 24; cf. the letter A fin.;

    hence it is called littera tristis (opp. A = absolvo, which is called littera salutaris),

    Cic. Mil. 6, 15 Moeb.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > C

  • 55 c

    C, c, n. indecl., or f., the third letter of the Latin alphabet; corresponded originally in sound to the Greek G (which in inscrr., esp. in the Doric, was frequently written like the Latin C; v. O. Müll. Etrusk. 2, p. 295); hence the old orthography: LECIONES, MACISTRATOS, EXFOCIONT, [pu]CNANDOD, PVC[nad], CARTACINIENSI, upon the Columna rostrata, for legiones, magistratos, effugiunt, pugnando, pugnā, Carthaginiensi; and the prænomina Gaius and Gnaeus, even to the latest times, were designated by C. and Cn., while Caeso or Kaeso was written with K; cf. the letter G. Still, even as early as the time of the kings, whether through the influence of the Tuscans, among whom G sounded like K, or of the. Sabines, whose language was kindred with that of the Tuscans, the C seems to have been substituted for K; hence even Consul was designated by Cos., and K remained in use only before a, as in Kalendae; k. k. for calumniae causā, INTERKAL for intercalaris, MERK for mercatus, and in a few other republican inscrr., because by this vowel K was distinguished from Q, as in Gr. Kappa from Koppa, and in Phœnician Caph from Cuph, while C was employed like other consonants with e. Q was used at the beginning of words only when u, pronounced like v, followed, as Quirites from Cures, Tanaquil from Thanchufil, Thanchfil, ThankWil; accordingly, C everywhere took the place of Q, when that accompanying labial sound was lost, or u was used as a vowel; so in the gentile name of Maecenas Cilnius, from the Etrusk. Cvelne or Cfelne (O. Müll. Etrusk. 1, p. 414 sq.); so in coctus, cocus, alicubi, sicubi; in relicŭŭs (four syl.) for reliquus (trisyl.): AECETIA = AEQITIA, i. q. aequitas (V. AECETIA), etc., and as in the Golden Age cujus was written for quojus, and cui for quoi (corresponding to cum for quom); thus, even in the most ancient period, quor or cur was used together with [p. 257] quare, cura with quaero, curia with Quiris, as inversely inquilinus with incola, and in S. C. Bacch. OQVOLTOD = occulto. Hence, at the end of words que, as well as ce in hic, sic, istic, illic, was changed to c, as in ac for atque, nec for neque, nunc, tunc, donec for numque, tumque, dumque; and in the middle of words it might also pass into g. as in negotium and neglego, cf. necopinus. Since C thus gradually took the place of K and Q, with the single exception that our kw was throughout designated by qu, it was strange that under the emperors grammarians began again to write k instead of c before a, though even Quint. 1, 7, 10, expressed his displeasure at this; and they afterwards wrote q before u, even when no labial sound followed, as in pequnia, or merely peqnia, for pecunia; cf. the letters Q and U. About the beginning of the sixth century of the city the modified form G was introduced for the flat guttural sound, and C thenceforth regularly represented the hard sound = our K. The use of aspirates was unknown to the Romans during the first six centuries, hence the letter C also represents the Gr. X, as BACA and BACANALIBVS, for Baccha and Bacchanalibus (the single C instead of the double, as regularly in the most ancient times); cf. also schizô with scindo, and poluchroos with pulcer. But even in the time of Cicero scheda came into use for scida, and pulcher for pulcer; so also the name of the Gracchi was aspirated, as were the name Cethegus and the word triumphus, which, however, in the song of the Arval brothers, is TRIVMPVS; cf. Cic. Or. 48, 160, and the letter P. About this time the use of aspirates became so common, in imitation of Greek, that Catullus wrote upon it an epigram (84), which begins with the words: Cho mmoda dicebat, si quando commoda vellet; and in Monum. Ancyr. inchoo is used for the orig. incoho, acc. to which the ancient Romans also employed cohors for chors (v. cohors).On account of the near relationship of c and g, as given above, they are very often interchanged, esp. when connected with liquids: Cygnus, Progne, Gnidus, Gnossus, from kuknos, Proknê, Knidos, Knôssos (even when n was separated from c by a vowel, as in Saguntum for Zakunthos, or absorbed by an s, as in vigesimus and trigesimus for vicensimus and tricensimus); mulgeo for mulceo, segmen from seco, gummi for commi (kommi); gurgulio for curculio, grabatus for krabatos, so that amurca was also written for amurga, from amorgê, as inversely conger for gonger, from gongros; but also with other letters; cf. mastruca and mastruga, misceo and misgô, mugio and mukaomai, gobius and kôbios, gubernator and kubernêtês. Not less freq. is the interchange of c and t, which is noticed by Quint. Inst. 1, 11, 5, and in accordance with which, in composition, d or t before qu, except with que, became c, as acquiro, nequicquam, iccirco for idcirco, ecquis for etquis, etc. Hence is explained the rejection of c before t, as in Lutatius for Luctatius, and the arbitrariness with which many names were written with cc or tt for ct, as Vettones for Vectones; Nacca or Natta for Nacta (from the Gr. gnaptô). It would be erroneouś to infer, from the varied orthography of the names' Accius, Attius, and Actius, or Peccius, Pettius, and Pectius, a hissing pronunciation of them; for as the Romans interchange the terminations icius and itius, and the orthography fetialis and fecialis, indutiae and induciae, with one another, they also wrote Basculi or Bastuli, anclare or antlare, etc. Ci for ti does not appear till an African inscr. of the third century after Christ, and not often before Gallic inscrr. and documents of the seventh century; ti for ci is not certainly found before the end of the fourth century; and ci before a vowel does not appear to have been pronounced as sh, except provincially, before the sixth or seventh century; cf. Roby, Gr. bk. 1, ch. 7; and so in gen., Corss. Ausspr. I. p. 33 sqq. C is sometimes interchanged with p: columba, palumbes; coquus, popa, popina (cf. in Gr. koteros; Sanscr. katara; poteros; Lat. uter). C is sometimes dropped in the middle of a word: luna for luc-na, lumen for luc-men; so also at the beginning of a word: uter for cuter; Sanscr. katara, v. supra.As an abbreviation, C designates Gaius, and reversed, O, Gaia; cf. Quint. 1, 7, 28. As a numeral, C = centum, and upon voting tablets = condemno, Ascon. Cic. Div. in Caecil. 7, 24; cf. the letter A fin.;

    hence it is called littera tristis (opp. A = absolvo, which is called littera salutaris),

    Cic. Mil. 6, 15 Moeb.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > c

  • 56 حرف

    حَرْف \ character: a kind of mark, sign, etc. used for a number or a letter; a kind of handwriting: These are printed characters. Arabic characters are formed from right to left. \ حَرْف (أو صوت) لِين \ vowel: a speech sound made with the open mouth, not using teeth, lips or tongue; a letter expressing such a sound: The main English vowels are a, e, i, o, u. \ حَرْف جَرّ \ preposition: a word like from or into. \ حَرْف ساكِن أو صامِت (في اللُّغَة)‏ \ consonant: (a letter which stands for) a sound which is not a vowel (such as b, d, k, s, f, etc.). \ حَرْف عَطْف \ conjunction: a word that joins others (such as and, but, or). \ حَرْف عِلَّة \ vowel: a speech sound made with the open mouth, not using teeth, lips or tongue; a letter expressing such a sound: The main English vowels are a, e, i, o, u. \ حَرْف كَبير \ capital letter,: the large form of a letter in English, such as A,C,Q. \ حَرْف من حروف الأبجدية \ letter: a sign (A, B, C, etc.) that is used for forming words.

    Arabic-English dictionary > حرف

  • 57 E

    E, e, indecl. n. or (sc. littera) fem., a vowel corresponding to both the e and the ê of the Greeks, Ter. Maur. p. 2386 P.; Aus. Idyll. de Litter. Monos. 3 and 4; Mart. Cap. 3, § 235. Its sound varied; short e being sounded sometimes like Engl. e in men (so in pater, inter, etc.), sometimes more nearly like short i, as in Engl. pin (so in famelia, mereto, Menerva, etc.); whence, in the literary language, it passed, in a large class of words, into ĭ (familia, merito, etc.), though retained in the popular speech, and oft. in inscriptions. Long e also varied in sound, often resembling the diphthong ae, with which it is constantly confounded in MSS. and inscrr. (cf. raeda and reda; saeculum and seculum; ceteri and caeteri, etc.), and often approaching the sound of ī (v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 324 sqq.). The short e in Latin is the least emphatic of all the vowels; hence, it not only took the place of other vowels in changes of words where the sounds became weakened, and in the vulgar language where the vowel sounds were less sharply distinguished, but frequently took the place of a final syllable ending in a consonant, and was sometimes, especially at the end of words, rejected.
    b.
    The transition of ă into ĕ (which took place especially before two consonants, whereas usually ă passed into ĭ in open syllables, v. art. A.) is seen in the compounds refello, commendo, ineptus, confercio, incestus, perpetior, etc. In some words the orthography is unsettled, as in the compounds of spargo, which are written sometimes aspergo, conspergo, dispergo, etc., and sometimes aspargo, conspargo, dispargo, etc.; as along with dispando the vulgar form dispenno also occurs. So in all the verbal reduplications, as cĕcidi, cĕcini, pĕperi, pĕpigi, tĕtigi; pĕperci, fĕfelli; dĕdi and stĕti (from cado, cano, pario, pango, tango, parco, fallo, DA and STA), whereas the vowels i, o, u remain unchanged in reduplication (bĭbi; mŏmordi; tŭtudi; for the anomalous forms in Gell. 7, 9, are certainly Graecized). As along with pĕpĭgi there also arose by syncope (in the Lat. lang. a predominating element in the formation of words) the perfect pēgi; so we may explain the perfect forms cēpi, fēci, jēci, frēgi, and ēgi, as syncopated from cĕcĭpi, fĕfĭci, jĕjĭci, frĕfĭgi, and ĕïgi (this last analogously with dēgo, from dēĭgo).
    c.
    For i stands ĕ
    (α).
    in the neuter forms of the adjectives in is (acre, agreste, facile, etc.).—
    (β).
    In the nominative forms: aedes, apes, canes, etc. (for aedis, apis, canis, etc. v. h. vv.).—
    (γ).
    In the dative forms: morte, jure dicundo, Dijove, Victore, etc. (cf. Neue, Formenl. 1, 192 sq.; and Quint. 1, 4, 17). —
    (δ).
    In the nominatives in es, whose genitive has ĭtis.—
    (ε).
    In the nominatives from stems ending in c, b, p, t, n, etc., as, pollex, caelebs, princeps, comes, flumen, from pollic-, caelib-, princip-, comit-, flumin-; and
    (ζ).
    In the old and partly vulgar manner of writing and pronouncing: CEPET, EXEMET, NAVEBOS (Colum. Rostr.), FVET, DEDET, TEMPESTATEBVS, TIBE (Epit. of the Scipios), COMPROMESISE (S. C. de Bacch.), MENERVA, MAGESTER, HERE, VEA, VELLA, etc. (Quint. 1, 4, 8, and 17; Varr. R. R. 1, 2, 14; cf. Cic. de Or. 3, 12, 46). In the earliest period (before Plautus) ĕ was found in many words in which ĭ afterwards took its place; as: semul, fuet, mereto, tempestatebus, etc.—
    (η).
    It is prob. too that the abl. ĕ of the third declension proceeded from ī (or id); cf. Neue, Formenl. 1, 239 sqq.; Corss. Ausspr. 2, 241 sq.
    d.
    It less freq. happens that o and u pass over into ĕ, as vello, ocellus, verto, vertex, vester, compared with vulsi, oculus, vorto, vortex, voster: generis from genus, societas from socius, etc.; and even for long u we have ĕ in dejĕro and pejĕro, from jūro.
    e.
    The stem vowel o is weakened to ĕ in the vocative of nouns in us of the second declension; ĕ also represents o in the perf. and in pass. forms, such as scripsere, conabare, conabere, from scripserunt, conabaris, conaberis; in the future forms attinge, dice, facie, recipie, from attingam, dicam, faciam, recipiam (see under dico init.); in the forms mage, pote, from magis, potis, etc.; it is inserted for euphony in the nom. of many nouns and adjj whose stems end in r preceded by a mute, as ager, aper, liber, aeger, ruber, sacer, etc.
    f.
    The vowel e is suppressed in the imperatives dic, duc, fac, fer, in the anteclass infinitive biber (from bibere); in the vocative of the second declension of nouns in ius, as Gai, geni, fili, canteri, columbari, mantuari, volturi, mi (cf. Freund in Jahn's Neue Jahrbüch, 1835, vol. 13, p. 148 sq.), in enclitic particles often, as: hic, haec, hoc, for hice, etc.; so, illaec, sic, nunc, nec, ac, etc.: viden, potin: quin, for quine, etc., and as an initial in the present forms of the verb esse (sum, sumus, sunt; sim, etc., for esum, esumus, esunt, esim, etc.). But the forms facul, simul, Bacchanal, etc., are not apocopated. Even a radical ĕ sometimes drops out when a prefix or suffix is taken; so, gigno, for gigeno: malignus, for maligenus: gnatus, for genatus.
    g.
    The long e interchanges most freq. with the diphthongs ae and oe (q. v.); yet it sometimes also took the place of ā, as in anhēlo, from hālo, and in the rustic bēlo, for bālo; and likewise of ī, as LEBER, SPECA, AMECVS, for līber, spīca, amīcus (Quint. Inst. l. l.; Varr. R. R. 1, 48, 2; Paul. ex Fest. p. 15, 6 Müll.); and in words borrowed from the Greek, as chorēa, Darēus, along with Academīa, Alexandrīa; see the letter I.
    h.
    As an abbreviation, E (mostly in connection with other abbreviations) signifies egregius, equus, eques, erexit, evocatus, etc.; e. g. E. M. V. = egregiae memoriae vir; E. Q. R. = eques Romanus; EE. QQ. RR. = equites Romani; E. P. = equo publico; E. M. D. S. P. E. = e monitu de sua pecunia erexit, etc.
    2.
    e.. praep., out of, from, v. ex.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > E

  • 58 e

    E, e, indecl. n. or (sc. littera) fem., a vowel corresponding to both the e and the ê of the Greeks, Ter. Maur. p. 2386 P.; Aus. Idyll. de Litter. Monos. 3 and 4; Mart. Cap. 3, § 235. Its sound varied; short e being sounded sometimes like Engl. e in men (so in pater, inter, etc.), sometimes more nearly like short i, as in Engl. pin (so in famelia, mereto, Menerva, etc.); whence, in the literary language, it passed, in a large class of words, into ĭ (familia, merito, etc.), though retained in the popular speech, and oft. in inscriptions. Long e also varied in sound, often resembling the diphthong ae, with which it is constantly confounded in MSS. and inscrr. (cf. raeda and reda; saeculum and seculum; ceteri and caeteri, etc.), and often approaching the sound of ī (v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 324 sqq.). The short e in Latin is the least emphatic of all the vowels; hence, it not only took the place of other vowels in changes of words where the sounds became weakened, and in the vulgar language where the vowel sounds were less sharply distinguished, but frequently took the place of a final syllable ending in a consonant, and was sometimes, especially at the end of words, rejected.
    b.
    The transition of ă into ĕ (which took place especially before two consonants, whereas usually ă passed into ĭ in open syllables, v. art. A.) is seen in the compounds refello, commendo, ineptus, confercio, incestus, perpetior, etc. In some words the orthography is unsettled, as in the compounds of spargo, which are written sometimes aspergo, conspergo, dispergo, etc., and sometimes aspargo, conspargo, dispargo, etc.; as along with dispando the vulgar form dispenno also occurs. So in all the verbal reduplications, as cĕcidi, cĕcini, pĕperi, pĕpigi, tĕtigi; pĕperci, fĕfelli; dĕdi and stĕti (from cado, cano, pario, pango, tango, parco, fallo, DA and STA), whereas the vowels i, o, u remain unchanged in reduplication (bĭbi; mŏmordi; tŭtudi; for the anomalous forms in Gell. 7, 9, are certainly Graecized). As along with pĕpĭgi there also arose by syncope (in the Lat. lang. a predominating element in the formation of words) the perfect pēgi; so we may explain the perfect forms cēpi, fēci, jēci, frēgi, and ēgi, as syncopated from cĕcĭpi, fĕfĭci, jĕjĭci, frĕfĭgi, and ĕïgi (this last analogously with dēgo, from dēĭgo).
    c.
    For i stands ĕ
    (α).
    in the neuter forms of the adjectives in is (acre, agreste, facile, etc.).—
    (β).
    In the nominative forms: aedes, apes, canes, etc. (for aedis, apis, canis, etc. v. h. vv.).—
    (γ).
    In the dative forms: morte, jure dicundo, Dijove, Victore, etc. (cf. Neue, Formenl. 1, 192 sq.; and Quint. 1, 4, 17). —
    (δ).
    In the nominatives in es, whose genitive has ĭtis.—
    (ε).
    In the nominatives from stems ending in c, b, p, t, n, etc., as, pollex, caelebs, princeps, comes, flumen, from pollic-, caelib-, princip-, comit-, flumin-; and
    (ζ).
    In the old and partly vulgar manner of writing and pronouncing: CEPET, EXEMET, NAVEBOS (Colum. Rostr.), FVET, DEDET, TEMPESTATEBVS, TIBE (Epit. of the Scipios), COMPROMESISE (S. C. de Bacch.), MENERVA, MAGESTER, HERE, VEA, VELLA, etc. (Quint. 1, 4, 8, and 17; Varr. R. R. 1, 2, 14; cf. Cic. de Or. 3, 12, 46). In the earliest period (before Plautus) ĕ was found in many words in which ĭ afterwards took its place; as: semul, fuet, mereto, tempestatebus, etc.—
    (η).
    It is prob. too that the abl. ĕ of the third declension proceeded from ī (or id); cf. Neue, Formenl. 1, 239 sqq.; Corss. Ausspr. 2, 241 sq.
    d.
    It less freq. happens that o and u pass over into ĕ, as vello, ocellus, verto, vertex, vester, compared with vulsi, oculus, vorto, vortex, voster: generis from genus, societas from socius, etc.; and even for long u we have ĕ in dejĕro and pejĕro, from jūro.
    e.
    The stem vowel o is weakened to ĕ in the vocative of nouns in us of the second declension; ĕ also represents o in the perf. and in pass. forms, such as scripsere, conabare, conabere, from scripserunt, conabaris, conaberis; in the future forms attinge, dice, facie, recipie, from attingam, dicam, faciam, recipiam (see under dico init.); in the forms mage, pote, from magis, potis, etc.; it is inserted for euphony in the nom. of many nouns and adjj whose stems end in r preceded by a mute, as ager, aper, liber, aeger, ruber, sacer, etc.
    f.
    The vowel e is suppressed in the imperatives dic, duc, fac, fer, in the anteclass infinitive biber (from bibere); in the vocative of the second declension of nouns in ius, as Gai, geni, fili, canteri, columbari, mantuari, volturi, mi (cf. Freund in Jahn's Neue Jahrbüch, 1835, vol. 13, p. 148 sq.), in enclitic particles often, as: hic, haec, hoc, for hice, etc.; so, illaec, sic, nunc, nec, ac, etc.: viden, potin: quin, for quine, etc., and as an initial in the present forms of the verb esse (sum, sumus, sunt; sim, etc., for esum, esumus, esunt, esim, etc.). But the forms facul, simul, Bacchanal, etc., are not apocopated. Even a radical ĕ sometimes drops out when a prefix or suffix is taken; so, gigno, for gigeno: malignus, for maligenus: gnatus, for genatus.
    g.
    The long e interchanges most freq. with the diphthongs ae and oe (q. v.); yet it sometimes also took the place of ā, as in anhēlo, from hālo, and in the rustic bēlo, for bālo; and likewise of ī, as LEBER, SPECA, AMECVS, for līber, spīca, amīcus (Quint. Inst. l. l.; Varr. R. R. 1, 48, 2; Paul. ex Fest. p. 15, 6 Müll.); and in words borrowed from the Greek, as chorēa, Darēus, along with Academīa, Alexandrīa; see the letter I.
    h.
    As an abbreviation, E (mostly in connection with other abbreviations) signifies egregius, equus, eques, erexit, evocatus, etc.; e. g. E. M. V. = egregiae memoriae vir; E. Q. R. = eques Romanus; EE. QQ. RR. = equites Romani; E. P. = equo publico; E. M. D. S. P. E. = e monitu de sua pecunia erexit, etc.
    2.
    e.. praep., out of, from, v. ex.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > e

  • 59 S

    S, s, indecl. n. or (agreeing with littera) f.
    I.
    The eighteenth letter of the Latin alphabet, corresponding in form to the old Greek S for S (Etruscan in a reversed form,);

    in its nature a sibilant semi-vowel, whose peculiarities were much discussed by the ancients, and are even treated of in a special work by Messala, a contemporary of Augustus (Messala in libro de S littera,

    Quint. 1, 7, 23; cf. Mart. Cap. 3, § 245).—
    II.
    As an initial and medial it has a hard and sharp sound (which is softened, however, between two vowels), and is therefore joined only with the tenues (c, p, t; cf., on the contrary, the Gr. sbennumi);

    and, as a medial, often written double after long vowels: caussa, cassus, divissiones (these forms, used by Cicero and Vergil, were already uncommon in Quintilian's time,

    Quint. 1, 7, 20; v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 283 sq.).—
    III.
    As a final it had a weakened sound, and therefore not only admitted the medial b before it (plebs, urbs, abs; Arabs, chalybs, etc.; v. the letter B), but often entirely disappeared. So in the ante-class. poets down to the early years of Cicero (and also in his own poem, entitled Aratus, written in his youth), before words beginning with a consonant, to avoid position: Ratu' Romulus, Fulviu' Nobilior, gravi' Terra, est sati' bella, Hyperioni' cursum, Virgine' nam sibi, etc.; cf. Cic. Or. 48, 161; Quint. 9, 4, 38; and v. Freund, in Jahn's Neue Jahrb. 1835, XIII. p. 25 sq.; less freq. before words beginning with a vowel, in which case, to avoid a hiatus, the vowel before s was also elided; vas' argenteis (for vasis argenteis) and palm' et crinibus (for palmis et crinibus); v. Cic. Or. 45, 153. So, too, in the fourth Epitaph of the Scipios (Inscr. Orell. 553), L. CORNELIO L. F. instead of CORNELIOS (cf. a similar elision of the M under that letter). Final s is also elided, and the preceding vowel either dropped with it or weakened, in the forms sat from satis, mage from magis; in the neutr. forms of adjectives of the third declension, acre, agreste, facile (v. the letter E); in the collat. forms of the sec. pers. sing. pass., fatere, fateare, fatebare, etc.; in the gen. sing. of the first, second, and fifth declensions, and in the nom. plur. of the first and second declensions (aurai for aura-is, analog. to reg is, etc.). Lastly, s disappears in the (mostly familiar) collat. forms abin', scin', viden', satin', from abisne, scisne, videsne, satisne, etc.—
    IV.
    As an etymological initial aspirate, s appears in many words whose Greek equivalents begin with a vowel: sal, semi-, serpo, sex, super, sus, corresp. to hals, hêmi-, herpô, hex, huper, us, etc.; si (archaic sei), sero, Segesta, corresp. to ei, ERÔ (whence eirô), Egesta. Less freq. in radical words beginning with a consonant: sculpo corresp. to gluphô, and the derivatives scruta, from grutê, and scrupedae, from kroupeza. To soften the termination, s appears in abs = ab, and ex corresp. to ek.—Very freq., on the contrary, an initial s appears in cognate forms in other languages, where corresp. Latin words have lost the s: Lat. fallo, Gr. sphallô; fungus, Gr. sphongos; fides, Gr. sphidê (comp. also nix with Engl. [p. 1609] snow, nurus with old Germ. snur, daughterin-law); cf. also cutis and scutum; cauda and root sku-, in Goth. skauts, etc.; casa and Gr. skia, skênê; cerno and Gr. krinô for skirnô, skôr, skôria; calumnia and skallô; gradior and root scra-, Germ. schreiten; parco and sparnos; penuria and spanis; pando and spaô; tego and stegô; tono and stonos; taurus and Sanscr. sthūras, Germ. Stier al.; v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, p. 277 sqq.—In the middle of a word s is dropped in at from ast.—
    V.
    S is interchanged,
    A.
    Most freq. with r; in partic., an original s, between two vowels, becomes r; v. Varr. L. L. 7, § 26 Müll.; so foederum for foedesum, plurima for plusima, meliorem for meliosem, Lares for Lases, etc.; cf. eram and sum, quaero and quaeso, nasus and naris. Appius Claudius, the censor, is said to have introduced r into the names Furius, Valerius, etc., in place of s, B.C. 312 (v. the letter R, II.).—
    B.
    With d: Claudius, from the Sabine Clausus; and, on the other hand, rosa, corresp. to the Gr. rhodon; cf. Schneid. Gram. 1, p. 259.—
    C.
    With t: tensus and tentus, resina corresp. to rhêtinê; and, on the contrary, aggrettus for aggressus; mertare, pultare, for mersare, pulsare (perh. also assentor for assensor).—
    D.
    With x; v. that letter.—
    VI.
    S is assimilated before f in the compounds of dis: differo, difficilis, diffluo, etc.; v. 3. dis.— On the other hand, it arises by assimilation from d, in assum, assumo, cessi, for adsum, adsumo, ced-si; from t in fassus, from fateor; from b in jussi, from jubeo; from m in pressi, from premo; from r in gessi, from gero; and dossuarius, from dorsum. —
    VII.
    As an abbreviation, S denotes sacrum, semis, sibi, suis, etc.; S. AS. D., sub asciā dedicavit; S. C., senatusconsultum; perh. also, sententia collegii (Inscr. Orell. 2385); S. P., sua pecunia; S. P. Q. R., Senatus Populusque Romanus, etc.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > S

  • 60 s

    S, s, indecl. n. or (agreeing with littera) f.
    I.
    The eighteenth letter of the Latin alphabet, corresponding in form to the old Greek S for S (Etruscan in a reversed form,);

    in its nature a sibilant semi-vowel, whose peculiarities were much discussed by the ancients, and are even treated of in a special work by Messala, a contemporary of Augustus (Messala in libro de S littera,

    Quint. 1, 7, 23; cf. Mart. Cap. 3, § 245).—
    II.
    As an initial and medial it has a hard and sharp sound (which is softened, however, between two vowels), and is therefore joined only with the tenues (c, p, t; cf., on the contrary, the Gr. sbennumi);

    and, as a medial, often written double after long vowels: caussa, cassus, divissiones (these forms, used by Cicero and Vergil, were already uncommon in Quintilian's time,

    Quint. 1, 7, 20; v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 283 sq.).—
    III.
    As a final it had a weakened sound, and therefore not only admitted the medial b before it (plebs, urbs, abs; Arabs, chalybs, etc.; v. the letter B), but often entirely disappeared. So in the ante-class. poets down to the early years of Cicero (and also in his own poem, entitled Aratus, written in his youth), before words beginning with a consonant, to avoid position: Ratu' Romulus, Fulviu' Nobilior, gravi' Terra, est sati' bella, Hyperioni' cursum, Virgine' nam sibi, etc.; cf. Cic. Or. 48, 161; Quint. 9, 4, 38; and v. Freund, in Jahn's Neue Jahrb. 1835, XIII. p. 25 sq.; less freq. before words beginning with a vowel, in which case, to avoid a hiatus, the vowel before s was also elided; vas' argenteis (for vasis argenteis) and palm' et crinibus (for palmis et crinibus); v. Cic. Or. 45, 153. So, too, in the fourth Epitaph of the Scipios (Inscr. Orell. 553), L. CORNELIO L. F. instead of CORNELIOS (cf. a similar elision of the M under that letter). Final s is also elided, and the preceding vowel either dropped with it or weakened, in the forms sat from satis, mage from magis; in the neutr. forms of adjectives of the third declension, acre, agreste, facile (v. the letter E); in the collat. forms of the sec. pers. sing. pass., fatere, fateare, fatebare, etc.; in the gen. sing. of the first, second, and fifth declensions, and in the nom. plur. of the first and second declensions (aurai for aura-is, analog. to reg is, etc.). Lastly, s disappears in the (mostly familiar) collat. forms abin', scin', viden', satin', from abisne, scisne, videsne, satisne, etc.—
    IV.
    As an etymological initial aspirate, s appears in many words whose Greek equivalents begin with a vowel: sal, semi-, serpo, sex, super, sus, corresp. to hals, hêmi-, herpô, hex, huper, us, etc.; si (archaic sei), sero, Segesta, corresp. to ei, ERÔ (whence eirô), Egesta. Less freq. in radical words beginning with a consonant: sculpo corresp. to gluphô, and the derivatives scruta, from grutê, and scrupedae, from kroupeza. To soften the termination, s appears in abs = ab, and ex corresp. to ek.—Very freq., on the contrary, an initial s appears in cognate forms in other languages, where corresp. Latin words have lost the s: Lat. fallo, Gr. sphallô; fungus, Gr. sphongos; fides, Gr. sphidê (comp. also nix with Engl. [p. 1609] snow, nurus with old Germ. snur, daughterin-law); cf. also cutis and scutum; cauda and root sku-, in Goth. skauts, etc.; casa and Gr. skia, skênê; cerno and Gr. krinô for skirnô, skôr, skôria; calumnia and skallô; gradior and root scra-, Germ. schreiten; parco and sparnos; penuria and spanis; pando and spaô; tego and stegô; tono and stonos; taurus and Sanscr. sthūras, Germ. Stier al.; v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, p. 277 sqq.—In the middle of a word s is dropped in at from ast.—
    V.
    S is interchanged,
    A.
    Most freq. with r; in partic., an original s, between two vowels, becomes r; v. Varr. L. L. 7, § 26 Müll.; so foederum for foedesum, plurima for plusima, meliorem for meliosem, Lares for Lases, etc.; cf. eram and sum, quaero and quaeso, nasus and naris. Appius Claudius, the censor, is said to have introduced r into the names Furius, Valerius, etc., in place of s, B.C. 312 (v. the letter R, II.).—
    B.
    With d: Claudius, from the Sabine Clausus; and, on the other hand, rosa, corresp. to the Gr. rhodon; cf. Schneid. Gram. 1, p. 259.—
    C.
    With t: tensus and tentus, resina corresp. to rhêtinê; and, on the contrary, aggrettus for aggressus; mertare, pultare, for mersare, pulsare (perh. also assentor for assensor).—
    D.
    With x; v. that letter.—
    VI.
    S is assimilated before f in the compounds of dis: differo, difficilis, diffluo, etc.; v. 3. dis.— On the other hand, it arises by assimilation from d, in assum, assumo, cessi, for adsum, adsumo, ced-si; from t in fassus, from fateor; from b in jussi, from jubeo; from m in pressi, from premo; from r in gessi, from gero; and dossuarius, from dorsum. —
    VII.
    As an abbreviation, S denotes sacrum, semis, sibi, suis, etc.; S. AS. D., sub asciā dedicavit; S. C., senatusconsultum; perh. also, sententia collegii (Inscr. Orell. 2385); S. P., sua pecunia; S. P. Q. R., Senatus Populusque Romanus, etc.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > s

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