caligatus

Latin

Etymology 1

The adjective was formed as caliga (a leathern shoe or boot) +‎ -ātus (-ed, suffix forming adjectives); the noun is a substantivisation of the adjective’s masculine forms, in elliptical use for [mīles] caligātus (booted [soldier]).

Pronunciation

Adjective

caligātus (feminine caligāta, neuter caligātum); first/second-declension adjective

  1. (military) wearing soldiers’ boots, booted
    1. (figuratively) belonging to the lower (social) orders, lowly, obscure
    2. (Medieval Latin, transferred sense) most pitiful, contemptible, unfortunate, or wretched
      Synonym: miserrimus
  2. (of a peasant) in heavy shoes, brogans
Declension

First/second-declension adjective.

singular plural
masculine feminine neuter masculine feminine neuter
nominative caligātus caligāta caligātum caligātī caligātae caligāta
genitive caligātī caligātae caligātī caligātōrum caligātārum caligātōrum
dative caligātō caligātae caligātō caligātīs
accusative caligātum caligātam caligātum caligātōs caligātās caligāta
ablative caligātō caligātā caligātō caligātīs
vocative caligāte caligāta caligātum caligātī caligātae caligāta
Descendants
  • English: caligate

Noun

caligātus m (genitive caligātī); second declension

  1. (military) a common soldier, a private
    Synonym: mīles gregārius
Declension

Second-declension noun.

References

Etymology 2

Pronunciation

Participle

cālīgātus (feminine cālīgāta, neuter cālīgātum); first/second-declension participle

  1. steamed
  2. groped about, had poor eyesight
Declension

First/second-declension adjective.