Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

-urnus

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Remove ads

Latin

Alternative forms

Etymology

Ultimately from the adjective-forming suffix -(i)nus; see also -rnus. Szemerényi 1959 proposes that the starting point was pre-Latin *hesterinos (hesternus) and *wesperinos (reconstructed based on the obsolete word vesperna). As a result of rebracketing, the *-erinos at the end of these words would have been attached to *diw- and *nokt-, the pre-Latin roots of the words diēs (day) and nox (night), initially forming *diw-erinos and *nokt-erinos. Szemerényi argues that *diw-erinos was syncopated to *diwrinos and then regularly developed to *diurnos (Latin diurnus), and then the ending *-urnos was extended by analogy to nocturnus and other words. Others have argued that the adjectives may have been formed on or influenced by the adverbs diū/diūs (by day) and noctū (at night).

Pronunciation

Suffix

-urnus (feminine -urna, neuter -urnum); first/second-declension suffix

  1. Enlargement of -nus (suffix forming adjectives).
    albus + -urnusalburnus
    diū (comparative stem: diūt-) + -urnusdiūturnus
    nox (oblique stem: noct-) + -urnusnocturnus
    tacitus + -urnustaciturnus

Declension

First/second-declension adjective.

More information singular, plural ...

Derived terms

References

  • -urnus” on page 2,107/2 of the Oxford Latin Dictionary (1st ed., 1968–82)
  • Szemerényi, Oswald (1959), “Latin hībernus and Greek χειμερινός”, in Glotta, volume 38, number 1./2. H., pages 107-125
Remove ads

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads