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eius. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
eius, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
eius in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
eius you have here. The definition of the word
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Latin
Pronunciation
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): /ˈei̯.i̯us/,
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /ˈe.jus/,
- The first syllable scans as heavy in Classical Latin verse. In accordance with this, some dictionaries and other linguistic resources mark the "E" in the first syllable with a length marker (ēius/ējus): however, there is no consensus that the vowel itself was long. Historically, some scholars have thought that the first syllable contained a long vowel /eː/ derived by monophthongization of an earlier diphthong .[1] But the geminate consonant /jj/, which was regularly written with single "i" in Latin,[2] would have rendered the preceding syllable heavy even if the vowel itself was short /e/. Compare peior[3] and ieiūnus, and see the discussion of intervocalic -i- in Allen 1978:38-40.[4] An alternative interpretation treats the first syllable as containing a diphthong /ei̯/;[5] this is essentially equivalent to /ej/, as there is no contrast in Latin between vowel-consonant sequences ending in /j/ and diphthongs ending in i̯. (Cser 2016:31-37 discusses the question of the best phonemic analysis of so-called 'diphthongs' in Latin and concludes that it is preferable to analyze them all as vowel-consonant sequences such as /ej/.)
- An iambic pronunciation, /e.jus/ (with a light first syllable) may occur in Plautus.
Determiner
eius
- genitive singular of is, ea, id (“anaphoric/cataphoric determiner”): his, of him, her, of her, its, of it; of this/of that
405 CE,
Jerome,
Vulgate Daniel.1.2:
- Et tradidit Dominus in manu eius Ioachim regem Iudae.
- And the Lord gave Jehoiakim king of Judah into his hand.
Descendants
See also
References
- ^ Raphael Kühner, Friedrich Holzweissig, Carl Stegmann (1912) Ausführliche Grammatik der lateinischen Sprache, 2 edition, Hanover: Hahnsche Buchhandlung, page 591: “Die Länge des Stammvokals ē im Gen. Sing. — stets ēius — erklärt sich aus der Bildung aus ei̯-i̯o-s; ebenso die fast stets beibehaltene Länge e im Dat. S. aus der Bildung aus ei̯-i-ei. s. § 131 d.”
- ^ András Cser (2016) Aspects of the Phonology and Morphology of Classical Latin (PhD thesis), Budapest, page 13: “Gemination is marked in spelling for all consonants except [j], which is rendered invariably with a single ⟨i⟩ or sometimes ⟨j⟩ in modern editorial practice, as in ⟨eius/ejus⟩ [ejjus] ‘his/her’.”
- ^ Nishimura, Kanehiro (2011) “Notes on Glide Treatment in Latin Orthography and Phonology: -iciō, servus, aiō”, in Historische Sprachforschung / Historical Linguistics, volume 124, page 193:
the provision of a macron (i.e., māior, as if the vowel were long) in order to display the syllable weight — the way common in a number of grammar books and dictionaries — is utterly misleading in that it disguises the phonological reality. The same is true of another comparative adjective peior 'worse' (< *ped-i̯os-, via *-di̯- > -i̯i̯-), the verb aiō 'say' (< *ag-i̯ō; see §3), and pronouns like eius (< *esi̯o-s, cf. Ved. asyá).
- ^ W. Sidney Allen (1978) Vox Latina, 2nd edition, pages 38-39: “With a few exceptions noted below, wherever a single, intervocalic i-consonant is written, it stands for a double consonant, i.e. [yy] [...] the consonant must be double in order to account for the fact that the preceding syllable is always metrically heavy; for the actual vowel is short”
- ^ Pedro Manuel Suárez-Martínez (2017) “Le vocatif en -ī de la deuxième déclinaison latine”, in Pallas, volume 103: “Comme Moralejo le montre, ces graphies avec un double -ii- reflèteraient la prononciation [ei-yus], due à la distribution syllabique des -i (-ii-) qui existaient, de manière sous-jacente, dans le -ī à l’origine de la forme eius.”
Further reading
- “eius”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
- eius in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
- Carl Meißner, Henry William Auden (1894) Latin Phrase-Book, London: Macmillan and Co.
- nothing will ever make me forgetful of him: memoriam eius nulla umquam delebit (obscurabit) oblivio (Fam. 2. 1)
- nothing will ever make me forgetful of him: semper memoria eius in (omnium) mentibus haerebit
- no word escaped him: nullum verbum ex ore eius excidit (or simply ei)
- he is in a suspicious mood: suspicio insidet in animo ejus