oricla

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Archived revision by Brutal Russian (talk | contribs) as of 04:13, 16 January 2020.
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Latin

Etymology

From auricula, which underwent syncope and monophthongisation. This term is attested in the Appendix Probi[1], a compilation of common mistakes written in the Late Antiquity.

Pronunciation

Noun

oricla f (genitive oriclae); first declension

  1. (Vulgar Latin, proscribed) Alternative form of auricula ("ear").
    • 3rd–4th century C.E., Appendix Probi:
      auris non oricla
      [Use] auris, not oricla.

Inflection

First-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative oricla oriclae
Genitive oriclae oriclārum
Dative oriclae oriclīs
Accusative oriclam oriclās
Ablative oriclā oriclīs
Vocative oricla oriclae

First declension.

Italo-Western declension of oricla
Number Singular Plural
nominative *ǫ́rẹcla *ǫ́rẹclę
genitive *ǫ́rẹclę *ǫrẹclárọ
dative *ǫ́rẹclę *ǫ́rẹclis
accusative-ablative *ǫ́rẹclã *ǫ́rẹclas
Eastern declension of oricla
Number Singular Plural
nominative *ǫ́rẹcla *ǫ́rẹclę
genitive *ǫ́rẹclę *ǫrẹcláru
dative *ǫ́rẹclę *ǫ́rẹclis
accusative-ablative *ǫ́rẹclã *ǫ́rẹclas
Sardinian declension of oricla
Number Singular Plural
nominative *ǫ́ricla *ǫ́riclę
genitive *ǫ́riclę *ǫricláru
dative *ǫ́riclę *ǫ́riclis
accusative-ablative *ǫ́riclã *ǫ́riclas

Descendants

Template:mid2

References