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conversus

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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English

Etymology

Borrowed from Ecclesiastical Latin conversus.

Noun

conversus (plural conversi)

  1. (chiefly historical) A lay brother.
    • 1856, Edward L. Cutts, “The Monks of the Middle Ages”, in The Art-Journal, volume 2, pages 342–3:
      There were again the Novices, who were not all necessarily young, for a conversus passed through a noviciate; and even a monk of another order, or of another house of their own order, and even a monk from a cell of their own house, was reckoned among the novices.
    • 1874, Edmund Sharpe, The Architecture of the Cistercians, volume 2, page 9:
      The Conversi were, in fact, the servants of the Monks; or, as the chronicler more mildly phrases it, the Monks were the head and the Conversi were the arms of the conventual body.
    • 1995, Jennifer Carpenter, “Juette of Huy, Recluse and Mother []”, in Jennifer Carpenter, Sally-Beth MacLean, editors, Power of the Weak: Studies on Medieval Women, →ISBN, page 74:
      A story in the early thirteenth-century vita of Arnulf (d. 1228), a conversus who was Abundus’s confrere at Villers, offers us some insight into the kind of relationship Juette and Abundus may have had: []
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Latin

Etymology

Perfect passive participle of convertō.

Participle

conversus (feminine conversa, neuter conversum); first/second-declension participle

  1. inverted
  2. turned over
  3. recoiled
  4. rotated
  5. reversed
  6. converted

Declension

First/second-declension adjective.

References

  • conversus”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879), A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • conversus”, in Gaffiot, Félix (1934), Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
  • Carl Meißner; Henry William Auden (1894), Latin Phrase-Book, London: Macmillan and Co.
    • (ambiguous) what follows has been translated into Latin from Plato's Phaedo: ex Platonis Phaedone haec in latinum conversa sunt
    • (ambiguous) the work when translated; translation (concrete): liber (scriptoris) conversus, translatus
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