-alia

See also: alia, Alia, alía, and aliá

English

Etymology 1

From the noun paraphernalia.

Suffix

-alia

  1. Objects associated with a particular thing.
    kitchenaliaobjects typically found or used in a kitchen

Etymology 2

From Latin -ālia.

Suffix

-alia

  1. (occurs in loanwords from Latin) Appears in the names of Roman festivals.

See also

Interlingua

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin -ālia.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈalia/, /ˈalja/

Suffix

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1=n
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-alia

  1. forms nouns from nouns, denoting a worthless collection
    ferro (iron) + ‎-alia → ‎ferralia (scrap iron)
    papiro (paper) + ‎-alia → ‎papiralia (waste/old/heaps of paper(s))

Derived terms

Category Interlingua terms suffixed with -alia not found

References

  • Alexander Gode, Hugh E. Blair (1955) Interlingua: A Grammar of the International Language, →ISBN

Latin

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

    A substantivisation of the neuter plural forms of the Classical Latin suffix -ālis.

    Suffix

    -ālia n pl (genitive -ālium); third declension

    1. forming names of religious festivals
    Declension

    Third-declension noun (neuter, pure i-stem), plural only.

    plural
    nominative -ālia
    genitive -ālium
    -āliōrum
    dative -ālibus
    accusative -ālia
    ablative -ālibus
    vocative -ālia
    Derived terms

    Etymology 2

    Regularly declined forms of -ālis.

    Suffix

    -ālia

    1. nominative/accusative/vocative neuter plural of -ālis

    Polish

    Etymology

      Derived from Latin -ālia.

      Pronunciation

      • IPA(key): /ˈa.lja/
      • Rhymes: -alja
      • Syllabification: [please specify syllabification manually]

      Suffix

      -alia nvir

      1. forms collective nouns
        generalny + ‎-alia → ‎generalia

      Declension

      Derived terms

      Polish terms suffixed with -alia