segnis

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Latin

Etymology

Uncertain. An adjective in *-ni reflecting possibly Proto-Indo-European *sek- (to coagulate, dry out) or *seh₁k- (to arrive), but with semantic problems. Cognates would then include Ancient Greek ἦκα (êka, slightly, slowly, a little) and ἥσσων (hḗssōn, inferior, weaker, smaller).

Otherwise, if not related to Ancient Greek words, possibly from Proto-Indo-European *seg- (to stick, adhere), with acceptable semantic shift from "sticky" to "inert". In both cases the long vowel possibly reflects an original root noun, or otherwise remains unexplainable.

Pronunciation

Adjective

sēgnis (neuter sēgne, comparative sēgnior, superlative sēgnissimus, adverb sēgniter); third-declension two-termination adjective

  1. slow, tardy, torpid, inactive, unenergetic, lazy
    Synonym: piger

Declension

Third-declension two-termination adjective.

Number Singular Plural
Case / Gender Masc./Fem. Neuter Masc./Fem. Neuter
Nominative sēgnis sēgne sēgnēs sēgnia
Genitive sēgnis sēgnium
Dative sēgnī sēgnibus
Accusative sēgnem sēgne sēgnēs
sēgnīs
sēgnia
Ablative sēgnī sēgnibus
Vocative sēgnis sēgne sēgnēs sēgnia

Derived terms

References