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-ensis

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also: ensis and Ensis

Latin

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Etymology

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    Unknown. Various theories have been put forward:

    • Hermann Gähwiler (1962), building on a suggestion by Manu Leumann, proposes a borrowing from Etruscan on the basis that its earliest attested non-toponymic use is in the term ātriēnsis, and the Roman ātrium was an Etruscan import.[1] A similar suffix is attested in Etruscan patronymics.[2]
    • Paavo Castrén (1981) rejects the relevance of ātriēnsis, viewing it as a later development. On the basis of various ancient, then-extinct peoples of Latium with names in -ēnsēs mentioned by Pliny the Elder, Castrén situates the emergence of the suffix in the late Proto-Villanovan period, perhaps as a borrowing from another Italic language.[3]
    • Chantal Kircher-Durand (1983) suggests a derivation from Proto-Indo-European *-went-ti- (< *-wénts, *-tis),[4] but considers Gähwiler’s thesis plausible.[2]
    • A. Zimmermann (1921) suggests a lost cognate of Ancient Greek ἐνς (ens), variant of εἰς (eis) (< Proto-Indo-European *h₁én) + .[2]

    Contrast Catalan -enc and Occitan -enc.

    Pronunciation

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    Suffix

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    -ēnsis (neuter -ēnse); third-declension two-termination suffix

    1. Of or from [a place].

    Usage notes

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    The suffix -ēnsis is added to a toponym (especially the name of a town) or to a topographical name, in order to form an adjective.

    Examples:
    Eborācum (York) + ‎-ēnsis → ‎eborācēnsis (of or from York)
    castra (camp) + ‎-ēnsis → ‎castrēnsis (of the camp)

    Declension

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    Third-declension two-termination adjective.

    singular plural
    masc./fem. neuter masc./fem. neuter
    nominative -ēnsis -ēnse -ēnsēs -ēnsia
    genitive -ēnsis -ēnsium
    dative -ēnsī -ēnsibus
    accusative -ēnsem -ēnse -ēnsēs
    -ēnsīs
    -ēnsia
    ablative -ēnsī -ēnsibus
    vocative -ēnsis -ēnse -ēnsēs -ēnsia

    Derived terms

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    Descendants

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    See also

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    References

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    1. ^ Gähwiler, Hermann (1962) Das lateinische Suffix -ensis (in German), pages 84–85
    2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Kircher-Durand, Chantal (2002) “Les dérivés en -ensis”, in Chantal Kircher-Durand, editor, Grammaire fondamentale du latin (in French), volume 9, Création lexicale: la formation des noms par dérivation suffixale, page 191
    3. ^ Castrén, Paavo (1981) “Von populi Albenses bis cives Campanienses. Anmerkungen zur Frühgeschichte des lateinischen Suffixes -ensis”, in Arctos: Acta Philologica Fennica[1] (in German), volume 15, pages 9–12
    4. ^ Kircher-Durand, Chantal (1983) “Les noms latins en -ensis”, in Documents LAMA (in French), volume 8, Centre de recherches comparatives sur les langues de la Méditerranée ancienne, pages 248–51