Quintinus
Latin
Etymology
From Latin diminutive of Quīntus, from quīntus (“fifth”), itself from quīnque (“five”).
Pronunciation
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): [kʷiːnˈtiː.nʊs]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): [kʷin̪ˈt̪iː.nus]
Proper noun
Quīntīnus m sg (genitive Quīntīnī); second declension
- a male given name, feminine equivalent Quīntīna
Declension
Second-declension noun, singular only.
| singular | |
|---|---|
| nominative | Quīntīnus |
| genitive | Quīntīnī |
| dative | Quīntīnō |
| accusative | Quīntīnum |
| ablative | Quīntīnō |
| vocative | Quīntīne |
Descendants
Descendants
- Basque: Kindin
- Breton: Kentin, Kintin
- Catalan: Quintí
- Cantonese Chinese: 昆廷 (Kwan-ting)
- Mandarin Chinese: 康坦 (Kāngtǎn), 昆廷 (Kūntíng)
- Corsican: Quintinu
- Dutch: Quintijn, Quentijn
- English: Quentin, Quintin
- Flemish: Quinten, Kwinten
- French: Quentin, Quintin
- Greek: Κοϊντίνος (Koïntínos), Κουϊντίνος (Kouïntínos), Κυντίνος (Kyntínos)
- Italian: Quintino
- Japanese: カンタン (Kantan), クエンティン (Kuentin)
- Lithuanian: Kventinas
- Polish: Kwintyn
- Portuguese: Quintino
- Russian: Квинтин (Kvintin)
- Serbo-Croatian: Kvintin
- Slovak: Quintin
- Spanish: Quintín
- Swedish: Qvintinus
References
- Quintīna, Quintīnus, Quintĭo in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette: “1,303/1”