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auceps syllabarum

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Latin

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Etymology

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From auceps (bird-catcher) + syllabārum (of syllables).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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auceps syllabārum m (genitive aucupis syllabārum); third declension

  1. (derogatory, humorous, hapax) a person who quibbles over words, argues over semantics or other technicalities; a pettifogger
    • 55 BCE, Cicero, De Oratore 1.236.7:
      Ita est tibi iūris cōnsultus ipse per sē nihil nisi lēguleius quīdam cautus et acūtus, praecō āctiōnum, cantor fōrmulārum, auceps syllabārum.
      And as a result, a lawyer in and of himself ends up being merely some kind of diligent and shrewd legal tradesman, a crier of legal actions, a singer of legal formulas, a trapper of syllables.

Declension

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Third-declension noun with an indeclinable portion.

singular plural
nominative auceps syllabārum aucupēs syllabārum
genitive aucupis syllabārum aucupum syllabārum
dative aucupī syllabārum aucupibus syllabārum
accusative aucupem syllabārum aucupēs syllabārum
ablative aucupe syllabārum aucupibus syllabārum
vocative auceps syllabārum aucupēs syllabārum