mecum

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See also: Mecum

Latin

Etymology

Univerbation of (me) +‎ cum (with).

Two, not necessarily mutually exclusive explanations have been offered:

The first explanation was offered by Cicero, who believed that the normal word order of cum nōbīs "with us" would sound too much like cunnō bīs "twice in the cunt", so the words were reversed. This reversal was then applied to cum vōbīs, cum mē, cum tē, and cum sē.

A modern explanation is that the word ordering comes from the fact that in Proto-Indo-European the word *ḱóm (whence cum derives) was an adverb, not a preposition as it became in Latin. As such the *ḱóm could appear before or after the object pronoun since it was the object of the verb, not the object of a preposition. As these special particles evolved into prepositions this word order became archaic even though it was still commonly used. Thus the contraction nōbīscum (and mēcum, etc.) evolved into an adverb in its own right.

Pronunciation

Adverb

mēcum (not comparable)

  1. with me
    Indignabar mecum.
    I resented with myself.
    Vade mecum.
    Go with me.
    Dii mecum militant.
    The gods are in favor with me.

Descendants

  • Dalmatian: conmaic
  • Emilian: mêg
  • Italian: meco
  • Old Leonese:
  • Old Galician-Portuguese: migo, comigo
    • Galician: comigo (con + migo)
    • Portuguese: comigo (com + migo)
  • Old Spanish:
  • Neapolitan: cummico

See also

References

  • mecum”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • mecum”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
  • mecum in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.

Old English

Pronunciation

Noun

mēċum

  1. dative plural of mēċe