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sicilis

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Latin

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Etymology 1

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From secō (cut, verb).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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sicilis f (genitive sicilis); third declension

  1. sickle
    Synonyms: falx, falcula, sēcula
    • Gaius Plinius Secundus, Naturalis Historia 6.38:
      Inrumpit autem artis faucibus et in longitudinem spatiosis, atque ubi coepit in latitudinem pandi lunatis obliquatur cornibus, velut ad Maeotium lacum ab ore descendens, sicilis, ut auctor est M. Varro, similitudine.
      • 1942 translation by H. Rackham
        Its waters make their way into this sea by a narrow mouth of considerable length; and where it begins to widen out it curves obliquely with crescent-shaped horns, as though descending from the mouth to the Sea of Azov, in the likeness of a sickle, as Marcus Varro states.
Declension
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Third-declension noun (i-stem).

singular plural
nominative sicilis sicilēs
genitive sicilis sicilium
dative sicilī sicilibus
accusative sicilem sicilēs
sicilīs
ablative sicile sicilibus
vocative sicilis sicilēs
Derived terms
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Descendants
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  • Aromanian: seatsiri
  • Romanian: secere
  • Vulgar Latin: *sicila, *sicilāre (see there for further descendants)
  • Proto-West Germanic: *sikilu (see there for further descendants)

Etymology 2

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From sīca +‎ -īlis.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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sīcīlis f (genitive sīcīlis); third declension

  1. spearhead
    • 239 BCE – 169 BCE, Ennius, Annales 479, (fragment per Paul the Deacon's epitome of Festus, glossed there as "hastarum spicula lata". Some manuscripts instead use the spelling "sicilīcibus", but this seems to be a corruption.[1]):
      i͞ncēdi͞t vēle͞s vo͞lgō sīcīlĭbŭs lātīs
      the skirmisher advances all over with broad/widespread spearheads
    • c. 177 CE, Aulus Gellius, Noctes Atticae 10.25.2:
      Telorum iaculorum gladiorumque vocabula, quae in historiis veteribus scripta sunt, item navigiorum genera et nomina libitum forte nobis est sedentibus in reda conquirere, ne quid malarum ineptiarum vacantem stupentemque animum occuparet. Quae tum igitur suppetierant, haec sunt: hasta, pilum, phalarica, semiphalarica, soliferrea, gaesa, lancea, spari, rumices, trifaces, tragulae, frameae, mesanculae, cateiae, rumpiae, scorpii, sibones, siciles, veruta, enses, sicae, machaerae, spathae, lingulae, pugiones, clunacula.
      • 1927 translation by J. C. Rolfe
        Once upon a time, when I was riding in a carriage, to keep my mind from being dull and unoccupied and a prey to worthless trifles, it chanced to occur to me to try to recall the names of weapons, darts and swords which are found in the early histories, and also the various kinds of boats and their names. Those, then, of the former that came to mind at the time are the following: spear, pike, fire-pike, half-pike, iron bolt, Gallic spear, lance, hunting-darts, javelins, long bolts, barbed-javelins, German spears, thronged-javelin, Gallic bolt, broadswords, poisoned arrows, Illyrian hunting-spears, cimeters, darts, swords, daggers, broadswords, double-edged swords, smallswords, poniards, cleavers.
Declension
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Third-declension noun (i-stem).

Derived terms
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References

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  1. ^ Skutch, Otto (1985) The Annals of Ennius, edited with introduction and commentary, pages 114, 639-640

Further reading

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