cymaticus

Latin

Etymology

Representing a hypothetical Ancient Greek etymon of the form *κῡμᾰτῐκός (kūmătĭkós), from κῦμᾰ (kûmă, a wave or billow on a river or of the sea, oblique stem: κῡμᾰτ-, kūmat-) +‎ -ῐκός (-ĭkós, of or pertaining to, whence -icus).

Pronunciation

Adjective

cȳmaticus (feminine cȳmatica, neuter cȳmaticum); first/second-declension adjective

  1. (New Latin) characteristic of the waves of the sea
    color cȳmaticus, caeruleus
    the color of sea-waves, cerulean
    • For quotations using this term, see Citations:cymaticus.

Declension

First/second-declension adjective.

singular plural
masculine feminine neuter masculine feminine neuter
nominative cȳmaticus cȳmatica cȳmaticum cȳmaticī cȳmaticae cȳmatica
genitive cȳmaticī cȳmaticae cȳmaticī cȳmaticōrum cȳmaticārum cȳmaticōrum
dative cȳmaticō cȳmaticae cȳmaticō cȳmaticīs
accusative cȳmaticum cȳmaticam cȳmaticum cȳmaticōs cȳmaticās cȳmatica
ablative cȳmaticō cȳmaticā cȳmaticō cȳmaticīs
vocative cȳmatice cȳmatica cȳmaticum cȳmaticī cȳmaticae cȳmatica