cuius (feminine cuia, neuter cuium); first/second-declension determiner. (interrogative) whose? quotations ▼ (relative) whose quotations ▼
- What is the meaning of the word culus?
- How do you pronounce cuius?
- What does Cui mean Latin?
- What are the 7 Latin cases?
- Is Anker a word?
- What is Corallo?
- What is the etymology of Cula?
- What declensions is caseus?
- What is the possessive case in Latin?
- Who is a caseophile?
- What is the word for cheese in Latin?
What is the meaning of the word culus?
(vulgar, anatomy) The posterior, arse, ass, buttocks quotations ▼ (vulgar, anatomy) The anus.
How do you pronounce cuius?
It seems to be pronounced differently. 'quis' is /kwis/ but 'cuius' is /ku jus/, not /kwi us/ (and 'cui' is /ku i/ not /kwi:/).
What does Cui mean Latin?
to whom, to which (relative); dative singular of quī
What are the 7 Latin cases?
There are 6 distinct cases in Latin: Nominative, Genitive, Dative, Accusative, Ablative, and Vocative; and there are vestiges of a seventh, the Locative.
Is Anker a word?
noun A former spelling of anchor . noun A liquid measure formerly used in England, and still common throughout Germany, Russia, and Denmark, having a capacity varying in different places from 9 to 10⅓ gallons. In Scotland it was equal to 20 Scotch pints. Also spelled anchor .
What is Corallo?
noun, adjective. coral [noun, adjective] (of) a hard substance of various colours, made up of skeletons of a kind of tiny sea animal. coral [noun, adjective] (of) an orange-pink colour/color. (Translation of corallo from the PASSWORD Italian–English Dictionary © 2014 K Dictionaries Ltd)
What is the etymology of Cula?
Etymology. From Malay cula (“horn”), from Ardhamagadhi Prakrit cūlā, from Sanskrit चूडा (cūḍā).
What declensions is caseus?
Second-declension noun.
What is the possessive case in Latin?
The genitive case is most familiar to English speakers as the case that expresses possession: "my hat" or "Harry's house." In Latin it is used to indicate any number of relationships that are most frequently and easily translated into English by the preposition "of": "love of god", "the driver of the bus," the "state ...
Who is a caseophile?
noun. a connoisseur or lover of cheese; a turophile.
What is the word for cheese in Latin?
Cheese, as well as the Spanish queso and German Kaese and a few other cheese words, all can be traced to the Latin word for cheese, caseus. Going back a little further, the earliest known proto-Indo-European root is *kwat-, a term that refers to the process of making cheese as it means “to ferment, to become sour.”