Sacratorius

Latin

Etymology

Perhaps from sacrātor +‎ -ius.

Pronunciation

Proper noun

Sacrātōrius m sg (genitive Sacrātōriī or Sacrātōrī); second declension

  1. a Roman nomen gentile, gens or "family name"
    • CIL 10, 503:
      Tudiciae M(arci) l(ibertae) Crotini / C(aius) Sacratorius Cinna / uxori et suis posteris
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)
    • BCAR-1923-125:
      Sacrator[ius] / N(umeri) et
      (mulieris) [l(ibertus)] / Speratus
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)

Declension

Second-declension noun, singular only.

singular
nominative Sacrātōrius
genitive Sacrātōriī
Sacrātōrī1
dative Sacrātōriō
accusative Sacrātōrium
ablative Sacrātōriō
vocative Sacrātōrī

1Found in older Latin (until the Augustan Age).

  • Sacrātōria

References

  • Margaret M. T. Watmough (1995) “The Suffix -tor-: Agent-Noun Formation in Latin and the Other Italic Languages”, in Glotta[1], volume 73, number 1/4, →ISSN, page 101
  • Walter Friedrich Otto (1898) Nomina propria Latina oriunda a participiis perfecti[2] (in Latin), Teubner, page 840
  • Beryl Rawson (1991) Marriage, divorce, and children in ancient Rome[3] (in Latin), Clarendon Press, →ISBN, page 172
  • Linda M. Gigante, George W. Houston (2008) “A Collection of Inscriptions from the Via Salaria Necropolis Now in the Speed Art Museum, Louisville, Kentucky”, in Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome[4], volume 53, →ISSN, pages 27–78