conquaestus

Latin

Alternative forms

Etymology

From conquaerō, alternative form of conquīrō (“seek for, collect” in Classical Latin; “acquire”, hence ultimately “conquer” in Vulgar and Medieval Latin), +‎ -tus.

Noun

conquaestus m (genitive conquaestūs); fourth declension (Medieval Latin)

  1. acquisition (of property by other means than inheritance)
  2. an acquisition, a thing acquired
  3. (by extension) conquest
  4. wealth
  5. revenue

Declension

Fourth-declension noun.

singular plural
nominative conquaestus conquaestūs
genitive conquaestūs conquaestuum
dative conquaestuī conquaestibus
accusative conquaestum conquaestūs
ablative conquaestū conquaestibus
vocative conquaestus conquaestūs
  • conquīsītiō

References