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-tis
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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Latin
Etymology 1
From Proto-Italic *-tis, from Proto-Indo-European *-tis, suffix forming nouns from verbal roots.
Pronunciation
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): [tɪs]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): [tis]
Suffix
-tis f
- (unproductive) suffix found in certain nouns originally derived from verbs
Usage notes
- This suffix appears as part of some inherited nouns, but is not productively used to derive new nouns in Latin. Its function was taken over by other synonymous suffixes; in particular, the extended form -tiō f. Furthermore, many nouns that originally ended in *-tis lost the vowel *-i- in their nominative singular, making new nominative singular forms that ended in *-ts, which was simplified to Latin -s. For example, Proto-Indo-European *méntis (“thought”) became pre-Latin *ments, yielding historical Latin mēns (“mind”), oblique stem ment(i)- (as in genitive singular mentis, genitive plural mentium): the same root is found in the Latin verb meminī (“to remember, bear in mind”). Other similarly formed nouns include mors (“death”), oblique stem mort(i)-, from the root of morior (“to die”), and fors (“chance”), oblique stem fort(i)-. However, this loss of *-i- was prevented in nouns with certain phonological forms, probably for the sake of avoiding particularly awkward consonant clusters: for example, vestis, restis and messis, tussis.
- As in other cases, suffix-initial -t- was regularly replaced with -s- after a verb root ending in a dental plosive (-t- or -d-), and the resulting cluster was regularly assimilated to -ss-.
- Etymologically, this suffix inflected with i-stem endings, but as with other i-stem nouns, certain case endings were altered by analogy with consonant-stem nouns. Different nouns varied in the extent to which they adopted consonant-stem endings in the oblique cases: for example, tussis almost always uses the i-stem accusative singular tussim, whereas vestis uses the accusative singular vestem, and messis is attested in the accusative singular both as messim and (more often) as messem.
- Based on old i-stem adverbial accusatives such as partim, the ending -tim gained an independent use as a productive suffix forming adverbs.
Declension
Third-declension noun (i-stem).
Derived terms
Etymology 2
Pronunciation
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): [tiːs]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): [tis]
Suffix
-tīs
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