出典:Wiktionary
From Latin genius (“inborn nature; a tutelary deity of a person または place; wit, brilliance”), from gignō (“to beget, produce”), Old Latin genō, from the Proto-Indo-European root *ǵenh₁-. Doublet of genio. See also genus.
genius (countable かつ uncountable, 複数形 geniuses または genii)
genius (comparative more genius, superlative most genius)
Ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *ǵenh₁- (“to beget”), perhaps through Old Latin genō (“to beget, give birth; to produce, cause”), + *-yos; compare Proto-Germanic *kunją (“kin”) and Sanskrit जन्य n (jánya, “lineage, tribe, people”), though all probably independent formations. Comparisons with Aramaic ܓܢܝܐ (ginnaya, “tutelary deity”), and with Arabic Arabic جِنِّي (jinnī, “jinn, spirit, demon”) and جَنِين (janīn, “embryo, germ”), suggest the effects of an older substrate word.
genius m (genitive geniī または genī); second declension
Second-declension noun.
Case | Singular | Plural |
---|---|---|
Nominative | genius | geniī |
Genitive | geniī genī1 |
geniōrum |
Dative | geniō | geniīs |
Accusative | genium | geniōs |
Ablative | geniō | geniīs |
Vocative | genī | geniī |
名詞の変化形:
|