miscellaneum
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Perhaps by back-formation from miscellanea, in accordance with the -um → -a rule of plural formation of neuter nouns in the nominative case from the Latin second declension.
Pronunciation
[edit]- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˌmɪsəˈleɪnɪəm/
Noun
[edit]miscellaneum (plural miscellanea)
- (rare, chiefly archaic) A miscellany.
- 1652: Samuel Hartlib, Cornu Copia : A Miscellaneum of lucriferous and most fructiferous Experiments, Observations, and Discoveries, immethodically distributed ; to be really demonstrated and communicated in all Sincerity., book title (Harleian Miscellany, volume VI, pages 27–36)
- Cornu Copia : A Miscellaneum of lucriferous and most fructiferous Experiments, Observations, and Discoveries, immethodically distributed ; to be really demonstrated and communicated in all Sincerity.
- 1851, The Musical World[1], page 129:
- The second part was devoted to a miscellaneum. It commenced with a reference to the interdiction of stage entertainment in the time of the Protectorate.
- 1999: Housman Society, Housman Society Journal, page 87 (Turner & Devereux)
- Aside from those cited in this miscellaneum, other copies are to be seen at Bryn Mawr (inscribed by Kennerley to R. W. Ellis); Southern Illinois University, Carbondale; and private collection 1.
- 1652: Samuel Hartlib, Cornu Copia : A Miscellaneum of lucriferous and most fructiferous Experiments, Observations, and Discoveries, immethodically distributed ; to be really demonstrated and communicated in all Sincerity., book title (Harleian Miscellany, volume VI, pages 27–36)
Usage notes
[edit]- Miscellanea is almost universally treated as a plurale tantum in English, consequently, the singular form miscellaneum is liable to cause confusion:
- As miscellanea means, in the usual sense, “a miscellaneous collection of different things”, a single miscellaneum is logically impossible because variety and diversity (in their usual senses) are attributes of groups of things, not of individual things; for example, a populace can be varied and diverse, but a person cannot be various or diverse.
- Miscellanea will usually be taken to mean “a single miscellany”, not several assortments.
- In common usage, miscellany is over seven hundred times more common than miscellaneum,[1] whereas miscellanea is around six hundred times more common than miscellaneum;[2] in re plural forms, the Anglicised miscellaneums is well over a hundred thousand times rarer than miscellanea[3] and over eighteen thousand times rarer than miscellanies.[4]
References
[edit]- ^ GoogleFight: miscellany vs. miscellaneum
- ^ GoogleFight: miscellanea vs. miscellaneum
- ^ GoogleFight: miscellanea vs. miscellaneums
- ^ GoogleFight: miscellanies vs. miscellaneums
Latin
[edit]Adjective
[edit]miscellāneum