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-torius

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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Latin

Alternative forms

Etymology

From -tor + -ius.

Pronunciation

Suffix

-tōrius (feminine -tōria, neuter -tōrium); first/second-declension suffix

  1. -ory; used to form adjectives from verbs
    Synonym: -ārius
    mereō, merēre, meruī, meritum (to deserve, earn, merit) + -tōriusmeritōrius (profitable)
    texō, texere, texuī, textum (to weave) + -tōriustextōrius (of weaving) — could also be derived from textor (weaver) with -ius

Usage notes

This suffix is one of many (including -tus, -tor, -tiō, -tim, -tō, -tūra) that all use the same verb stem as the supine, perfect passive participle, and/or future active participle, found in the verb's fourth principal part. This stem is conventionally considered to end in -t- (or for some verbs, -s-), which would imply analyzing the suffixes as -us, -or, -io, -im, etc. However, from an etymological perspective it is more accurate to identify -t-/-s- as the initial consonant of these suffixes.

Note that in some cases, where the suffix -ius is added to an agent noun ending in -tor, the result may be difficult or impossible to distinguish from the addition of -tōrius.

Declension

First/second-declension adjective.

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Aromanian: -tor, -toari
  • Asturian: -doriu
  • Dutch: -orisch (calque)
  • German: -orisch (calque)
  • Italian: -toio, -toia
  • Old French: -oire
    • Middle English: -orie
    • French: -oire
    • Norman: -ouaithe (Jersey)
  • Old Galician-Portuguese: -doiro
  • Romanian: -tor, -ător, -toare, -ătoare
  • Spanish: -dero
  • Borrowings:
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