aedile

See also: ædile

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Latin aedīlis (commissioner or magistrate).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈiːdaɪl/

Noun

aedile (plural aediles)

  1. (historical, Ancient Rome) An elected official who was responsible for the maintenance of public buildings, regulation of festivals, supervision of markets and the supply of grain and water.
    • 2010, Mary Beard, chapter 2, in Pompeii: The Life of a Roman Town:
      Some of these encroachments may have received permission from the town council or the local aediles. A handful of painted notices found on the outside of the Amphitheatre suggest that it was the aediles who authorised the street vendors plying their trade underneath the monument’s arches, and assigned their pitches: ‘By permission of the aediles. Licensed to Caius Aninius Fortunatus’ etc., as the faint and fragmentary Latin seems to say.

Derived terms

Translations

Anagrams


Latin

Noun

aedīle

  1. ablative singular of aedīlis
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