morbus gallicus
Latin
Etymology
Compound of morbus (“disease”) + gallicus (“Gallic, French”). Attested from the 16th century. Compare English French pox (“syphilis”).
Noun
morbus gallicus m sg (genitive morbī gallicī); second declension
- (New Latin) syphilis
- c. 1498, Gaspar Torrella, Tractatus cum consiliis contra pudendagram seu morbum gallicum, →OCLC:
- Tractatus cum consiliis contra pudendagram seu morbum gallicum
- Plans to deal with venereal disease or syphilis
- 1830 [1530], Girolamo Fracastoro, edited by Ludwig Choulant, Hieronymi Fracastori Syphilis sive Morbus gallicus[1], page 14:
- Syphilis sive morbus Gallicus.
- Syphilis, or the French disease
Declension
- Second-declension noun with a second-declension adjective, singular only.
| singular | |
|---|---|
| nominative | morbus gallicus |
| genitive | morbī gallicī |
| dative | morbō gallicō |
| accusative | morbum gallicum |
| ablative | morbō gallicō |
| vocative | morbe gallice |