出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/01/26 06:38 UTC 版)
Borrowed from Medieval Latin syllabus (“list”), which arose as a misprint, its accusative plural syllabos appearing in place of sittybas in a 1470s edition of Cicero's “Ad Atticum” IV.5 and 8. The corrupt form was influenced by the stem of Ancient Greek συλλαμβάνω (sullambánō, “put together”), the source of σῠλλᾰβή (sŭllăbḗ, “syllable”); the true etymon is σιττύβα (sittúba, “parchment label, table of contents”) [or σιττύβας (sittúbas)] of unknown origin.
syllabus (plural syllabi or syllabuses)
syllabus m (genitive syllabī); second declension
Second-declension noun.
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | syllabus | syllabī |
| genitive | syllabī | syllabōrum |
| dative | syllabō | syllabīs |
| accusative | syllabum | syllabōs |
| ablative | syllabō | syllabīs |
| vocative | syllabe | syllabī |
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the presidential message
a book for self-study
a book
a document
a school-schedule
the general course
the literary course
名詞の変化形:
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