extispex
English
Etymology
Noun
extispex (plural extispices)
- (historical) Somebody who predicts the future using entrails
- 1836, Thomas Swinburne Carr, A manual of Roman antiquities, page 30:
- The Aruspices, or rather Haruspices, were those priests whose chief business it was to inspect the entrails of beasts offered in sacrifice; and hence they were sometimes called extispices.
- 1854, Christian Charles Josias Bunsen, Outlines of the Philosophy of Universal History: Christianity and Mankind, Their Beginnings and Prospects:
- As the same person might be both extispex and fulgurator, it is not astonishing to find them both called haruspices.
- 2008, Eftychia Stavrianopoulou, Axel Michaels, Claus Ambos, Transformations in Sacrificial Practices, →ISBN:
- A further function of sacrificial integration illustrates another significance of the extispex for the confirmation of the political hierarchy and, above all, of the Roman emperor and his communication with the gods.
- 2013, Budge, Amulets & Magic, →ISBN, page 452:
- The Sun-god was believed to have arranged the entrails of the sacrificial lamb in such a way that they would indicate to men the will of the gods, and, moreover, that he set marks upon them which could not be mistaken by the skilled extispex.
Translations
Latin
Etymology
exta (“entrails”) + *spex, the same element as auspex and haruspex.
Pronunciation
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): [ɛkˈstɪs.pɛks]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): [ekˈst̪is.peks]
Noun
extispex m (genitive extispicis); third declension
- a diviner who reads prophesies from the entrails of animals; a soothsayer
Declension
Third-declension noun.
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | extispex | extispicēs |
genitive | extispicis | extispicium extispicum |
dative | extispicī | extispicibus |
accusative | extispicem | extispicēs |
ablative | extispice | extispicibus |
vocative | extispex | extispicēs |
Derived terms
References
- “extispex”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- “extispex”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers