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sicilicus

出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/11/22 01:43 UTC )

語源

From the Latin sicilicus, the diminutive form of sicilis (sickle), so named because of its falciformity.

発音

名詞

sicilicus (plural sicilici)

  1. (Old Latin typography) A diacritic, resembling a 180°-rotated ‘C’ (i.e., being similar in appearance to ⟨ᵓ⟩), written atop a consonant to mark gemination, superseded in Classical Latin by doubling the letter representing the geminated consonant.
  2. (Roman measurements) An unit of weight equal to one quarter of an uncia.

同意語

参考


Latin numbers
XLVIII
48
    Cardinal: duodēquīnquāgintā
    Ordinal: duodēquīnquāgēsimus, quadrāgēsimus octāvus
    Distributive: duodēquīnquāgēnus, quadrāgēnus octōnus
    Fractional: sicilicus

語源

From sī̆cī̆lis (sickle) +‎ -icus. An alternative hypothesis supposes the name of the coin was borrowed from a source related to Greek σίκλος (klos), Hebrew שֶׁקֶל (shékel, shekel), etc., with the name of the unit then following.

発音

名詞

sī̆cī̆licus m (genitive sī̆cī̆licī); second declension

  1. a sicilicus (a unit of weight equal to one quarter of an uncia, or 1/48 of an as)
  2. (by extension) any other units that are 1/48 of another unit of measurement
    1. one forty-eighth of a jugerum
    2. the forty-eight part of an hour
    3. one forty-eighth of a foot (a quarter of an inch)
  3. the name of a coin
  4. (grammar) a comma
  5. (grammar) a diacritic designating gemination of consonants, said to have been used by the ancients (antīquī) in Post-Augustan writers

語形変化

Second-declension noun.

singular plural
nominative sī̆cī̆licus sī̆cī̆licī
genitive sī̆cī̆licī sī̆cī̆licōrum
dative sī̆cī̆licō sī̆cī̆licīs
accusative sī̆cī̆licum sī̆cī̆licōs
ablative sī̆cī̆licō sī̆cī̆licīs
vocative sī̆cī̆lice sī̆cī̆licī

関連する語

  • sī̆cī̆licula
  • sī̆cī̆limenta
  • sī̆cī̆liō
  • sī̆cī̆lis

派生した語

  • English: sicilicus

参照

  1. Bianchi, Francesco Paolo (2024), “Alcuni grecismi di Plauto e la tradizione della commedia greca”, in Plautus Revisited: Problemstellungen und Perspektiven der Plautusforschung, page 456
  2. ^ Calabretta, Marianna (2014), “A proposito di sicilicissitat (Menaechmi v. 12)”, in La Biblioteca di CC‎, volume 1, pages 130-136
  3. ^ Fontaine, Michael (2010), Funny Words in Plautine Comedy, Oxford University Press, page 10:
    Pace the OLD, which does gloss the word sicilicus but does not give the definition relevant here, the scansion sĭcĭlĭcus (probably 'little sickle,' formed from sĭcĭlis 'sickle' [Pliny Nat. 6.38, following Varro]) is, I think, fixed separately by (i) Paulus (453 L) SI LICUM dictum, quod semunciam sĕcet 'the sicilicus is so called because it "cuts" (sĕcet) a half-ounce'; and (ii) the scansion sīcĭlĭcus, twice at verse head in the anonymous Carmen de ponderibus (c. AD 400; ed. Hultsch [1864-1866]), where I suspect the first syllable is artificially lengthened in imitation of Virgil's Sīcelides (Ed. 4.1), Hellenistic Σῑκελικ- (Theocritus 8.56, SH 202.17 [Archimelus], Moschus Epit. Bion. 8), as meter requires (cf. LHS 1, 115 §130.I.A.2). The word sĭcĭlis is not connected with the homograph sīcīlis 'spike,' and so the scansion * sīcīlĭcus that the OLD and other lexica prescribe is erroneous.

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発音記号

  • / sɪˈsɪlɪkəs(米国英語)

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