出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/06/20 11:03 UTC 版)
From Latin sēstertius (“that is two-and-a-half”), from sēmis (“half”) + tertius (“third”), in which “third” refers to the third as: the sestertius was worth two full asses and half of a third.
sestertius (plural sestertii)
sēstertius m (genitive sēstertiī or sēstertī); second declension
Four sesterces were equal to one denarius, and a hundred sesterces to one aureus. Although there were larger coins in the empire, many large prices were calculated in sesterces instead.
When a distributive numeral is used in front of the neuter plural sēstertia, it is read as that many thousands of sesterces. When a numeral adverb (e.g. deciens) is used in front of the genitive plural sēstertium, it is read as that many hundred thousands of sesterces.
Second-declension noun.
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | sēstertius | sēstertiī |
| genitive | sēstertiī sēstertī |
sēstertiōrum sēstertium |
| dative | sēstertiō | sēstertiīs |
| accusative | sēstertium | sēstertiōs |
| ablative | sēstertiō | sēstertiīs |
| vocative | sēstertie | sēstertiī |
Found in older Latin (until the Augustan Age).
Feminine variant:
Modern borrowings:
| ・sestertius | |
| ・unthing | |
| ・lararium | |
| ・uberfamous | |
| ・s.b. | |
| ・Dragomans | |
| ・block vote | |
| ・galectin 2 | |
| ・Mucky | |
| ・ATF-4 |