amasius

English

Etymology

From the Latin amāsius (a lover).

Noun

amasius (plural amasii)

  1. (rare, literary) One’s beloved; a lover.
    • 1607?, Edward Topsell, The Hiſtory of Four-footed Beaſts and Serpents (1658), “Of the Lion”, page 369:
      Ovid hath a witty fiction of one Phyllius, who fell ſo deeply in love with a little boy, that at his pleaſure he took many wilde Beaſts, Birds, and Lions, and tamed them to the delight of his Amaſius: at length the inſatiable Boy required him to do the like by a Bull, which he had overcome, but Phyllius denying that requeſt, the Boy preſently caſt himſelf down from a Rock, and was afterward turned into a Swan.

Anagrams

Latin

Etymology

From amō (I love).

Pronunciation

Noun

amāsius m (genitive amāsiī or amāsī); second declension

  1. a lover
    • c. 189 BCE, Plautus, Truculentus 3.1.14–15:
      nunc ego istos mundulos urbanos amasios
      hoc ictu exponam atque omnis eiciam foras
      Now those finicky town bed-hoppers
      with this one stroke shall I send adrift and toss them all outside
    • c. 177 CE, Aulus Gellius, Noctes Atticae 6.8.1:
      Delphinos venerios esse et amasios non modo historiae veteres, sed recentes quoque memoriae declarant.
      That dolphins are affectionate and amorous is shown, not only by ancient history, but also by tales of recent date.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Quintilian to this entry?)

Declension

Second-declension noun.

singular plural
nominative amāsius amāsiī
genitive amāsiī
amāsī1
amāsiōrum
dative amāsiō amāsiīs
accusative amāsium amāsiōs
ablative amāsiō amāsiīs
vocative amāsie amāsiī

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

Synonyms

Derived terms

  • amāsia (Mediaeval)
  • amāsiuncula
  • amāsiunculus

Descendants

  • Italian: amasio
  • English: amasius

References