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cavernosus

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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Latin

Etymology

From caverna (a hollow, cave, cavity) + -ōsus (-ous, -ose, adjectival suffix).

Pronunciation

Adjective

cavernōsus (feminine cavernōsa, neuter cavernōsum); first/second-declension adjective

  1. full of hollows or cavities; cavernous
    • 77 AD, Pliny the Elder, Natural History, section 26.30:
      polypodī, quam nostrī filiculam vocant, similis filicī, rādīx in ūsū, pilōsa, colōris intus herbāceī, crassitūdine digitī minimī, acētābulīs cavernōsa ceu polypōrum cirrī, subdulcis, in petrīs nāscens aut sub arboribus vetustīs.
      The polypodium, which we call the little fern, is similar to the fern; its root is in use, [which is] hairy, colored like grass inside, as thick as the little finger, covered with cavities in the form of round indentations like those of the octopus's tentacle, somewhat sweet, [and] grows on rocks or at the foot of old trees.
    • c. 400, Prudentius, Hamartigenia, lines 316-20:
      num propter lyricae modulāmina vāna puellae
      nervōrumque sonōs et convīvāle calentis
      carmen nēquitiae patulās Deus addidit aurēs
      perque cavernōsōs iussit penetrāre meātūs
      vōcis iter?
      Surely it was not for the sake of the idle melodies of a girl with a lyre, the sounds of the strings and the festive song of aroused wickedness, that God gave [us] open ears and commanded the path of the voice to enter them by hollow channels?

Inflection

First/second-declension adjective.

Descendants

References

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