出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/05/10 02:16 UTC 版)
puter (plural puters)
From a stem *pŭtri-, commonly considered a close cognate to Old Irish othar m (“sickness”) (from a stem pŭtro-), from Proto-Indo-European *puH- (“rotten, foul”) (also the source of Latin pūs (“pus, foul matter”) and pūteō (“to be rotten”) and English foul; see links for additional cognates).
It is uncertain why *pŭtri- and *pŭtro- have short *ŭ, since the rules for the evolution of preconsonantal Proto-Indo-European *-uH- in Italic and Celtic are disputed. Proposed explanations include:
Like all other Latin three-termination third-declension adjectives, the nominative forms were affected by a combination of sound changes and analogy. The masculine nominative singular puter (rare; found in Varro and Ovid) would be the regular phonetic outcome of an earlier form *putr̥s (with syllabic *r̥), from syncope of original putris. (Compare ter from Proto-Indo-European *trís.) It is also declined as a two-termination adjective with the alternative masculine nominative singular putris (e.g. "lapis ipse gracilis et putris", Pliny Epistulae 10.39).
puter or putris (feminine putris, neuter putre); third-declension three-termination adjective
Third-declension three-termination adjective.
| singular | plural | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| masculine | feminine | neuter | masculine | feminine | neuter | ||
| nominative | puter putris |
putris | putre | putrēs | putria | ||
| genitive | putris | putrium | |||||
| dative | putrī | putribus | |||||
| accusative | putrem | putre | putrīs putrēs |
putria | |||
| ablative | putrī | putribus | |||||
| vocative | puter putris |
putris | putre | putrēs | putria | ||