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Learned borrowing from Latincentum(“hundred”), attested at least since 1890s. Its use in linguistics is due to it being a canonical example of a word retaining an original velar stop, as opposed to Avestan𐬯𐬀𐬙𐬆𐬨(satəm). Doublet of hundred and satem.
2003, Johanna Nichols, Archaeology and Language II: Archaeological Data and Linguistic Hypotheses:
Table 10.1 shows the relative chronology of centum and satem entries to the west. Along each trajectory, centum languages precede satem languages, and the frontier languages, thos most clearly showing peripheral type shift, are centum.
(Sanskrit and other Indian philology)Satakam, set of one hundred verses connected by the same metre or topic.
1847, William Taylor, Madras Journal of Literature and Science:
Tonda-mandala-sātacam, a centum of verses on the Conjeveram country, No. 148, C. M. 73. The sātacam is a poem of one hundred stanzas, in its appropriate metre.
2017, Language, Culture and Power: English–Tamil in Modern India, 1900 to Present Day:
Norman Cutler's Songs of Experience: The Poetics of Tamil Devotion (1987) provides a partial translation, choosing to translate just 50 hymns from the first two centums and a few phalasrutis, or the signature stanzas.
“centum”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
“centum”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
centum in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition with additions by D. P. Carpenterius, Adelungius and others, edited by Léopold Favre, 1883–1887)
centum in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
Carl Meißner, Henry William Auden (1894) Latin Phrase-Book, London: Macmillan and Co.
to reach one's hundredth year, to live to be a hundred: centum annos complere
about a hundred of our men fell: nostri circiter centum ceciderunt