deblateratus

Latin

Etymology

Perfect passive participle of dēblaterō.

Participle

dēblaterātus (feminine dēblaterāta, neuter dēblaterātum); first/second-declension participle

  1. blabbed, foolishly blabbed

Declension

First/second-declension adjective.

singular plural
masculine feminine neuter masculine feminine neuter
nominative dēblaterātus dēblaterāta dēblaterātum dēblaterātī dēblaterātae dēblaterāta
genitive dēblaterātī dēblaterātae dēblaterātī dēblaterātōrum dēblaterātārum dēblaterātōrum
dative dēblaterātō dēblaterātae dēblaterātō dēblaterātīs
accusative dēblaterātum dēblaterātam dēblaterātum dēblaterātōs dēblaterātās dēblaterāta
ablative dēblaterātō dēblaterātā dēblaterātō dēblaterātīs
vocative dēblaterāte dēblaterāta dēblaterātum dēblaterātī dēblaterātae dēblaterāta

References

  • Tyronis Thesaurus: Or, Entick's Latin-English Dictionary, with a Classical Index of the Preterperfects and Supines of Verbs. By William Crakelt, Baltimore, 1840, p. 142 (books.google): „Dēblătĕrātus, a, um. pt. foolishly blabbed.“
  • The New Latin and English Dictionary. By John Entick, London, 1771 (MDCCLXXI), column BLA (books.google): „Blabbed, deblateratus.“