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Atthis. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
Atthis, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
Atthis in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
Atthis you have here. The definition of the word
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Translingual
Etymology
New Latin, after Atthis (“a mythological Greek woman, after whom Actaea was renamed Attica”), from Ancient Greek Ἀτθίς (Atthís).
Proper noun
Atthis f
- A taxonomic genus within the family Trochilidae – certain hummingbirds.
Hypernyms
References
Latin
Etymology
From Ancient Greek Ἀτθῐ́ς (Atthís, “Attic”, as a noun “the Attic dialect, the history of Athens, Athens itself”, feminine adjective).
Pronunciation
Proper noun
Atthis f sg (genitive Atthidos); third declension
- (Late Latin) Attic Greek (prestige dialect of Ancient Greek)
- Coordinate terms: Aeolis f, coenē f, Dōris f, Ias f
late AD 4th century,
Diomedes Grammaticus,
Artis Grammaticae libri III 440.5:
- Quinque sunt linguae Graecorum, Ias Doris Atthis Aeolis coene.
late AD 4th century,
Diomedes Grammaticus,
Artis Grammaticae libri III 440.16–23:
- Atthis, quae brevitati studet, admittit soloecismos, quos cum docti fecerint, non soloecismi sed schemata logu appellantur, ut est
n u d a g e n u
et
u r b e m q u a m s t a t u o v e s t r a e s t.
ibi enim nudum genu habens debuit dicere et urbs quam statuo vestra est. sed serviens schemati quod appellatur hellenismos tres partes orationis redegit in duas usus per Atticismon.- Attic, which favours concision, allows solecisms , when learned men have committed them, are called not solecisms but figures of speech, as for instance “nuda genu” and “urbem quam statuo vestra est” . For in those places [Virgil] ought to have said “nudum genu habens” and “urbs quam statuo vestra est”. But in service to the figure, that which is called Hellenism has reduced the three parts of speech to the two of usage on account of Atticism.
Declension
Third-declension noun (Greek-type, normal variant), singular only.
1In poetry.
Further reading
- “Atthis”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- Atthis in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette, page 183/2.