oclus
Latin
Etymology
From Latin oculus, which underwent syncope. This term is attested[1] in the Appendix Probi, a compilation of common mistakes written in the Late Antiquity.
Inflection
Second declension.
Case | Singular | Plural |
---|---|---|
Nominative | oclus | oclī |
Genitive | oclī | oclōrum |
Dative | oclō | oclīs |
Accusative | oclum | oclōs |
Ablative | oclō | oclīs |
Vocative | ocle | oclī |
Second declension.
Italo-Western declension of *oclus | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Number | Singular | Plural | ||
nominative | *ǫ́clọs | *ǫ́cli | ||
genitive | *ǫ́cli | *ǫclọ́rọ | ||
dative | *ǫ́clọ | *ǫ́clis | ||
accusative-ablative | *ǫ́clọ | *ǫ́clọs |
Eastern declension of *oclus | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Number | Singular | Plural | ||
nominative | *ǫ́clus | *ǫ́cli | ||
genitive | *ǫ́cli | *ǫclóru | ||
dative | *ǫ́clo | *ǫ́clis | ||
accusative-ablative | *ǫ́clu | *ǫ́clos |
Sardinian declension of *oclus | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Number | Singular | Plural | ||
nominative | *ǫ́clus | *ǫ́cli | ||
genitive | *ǫ́cli | *ǫclóru | ||
dative | *ǫ́clo | *ǫ́clis | ||
accusative-ablative | *ǫ́clu | *ǫ́clos |
Descendants
References
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.