onomatopoeiae
English
Noun
onomatopoeiae
- (rare) plural of onomatopoeia
- 1912, Henri Alexandre Junod, The life of a South African tribe (Neuchatel: Attinger) p. 146 fn (1)
- Nor can I approve of the term employed by Torrend : onomatopoetic substantives. Substantives they are certainly not, as they pertain to none of the eight classes and have nothing of the nature of nouns. On the other hand, only a part of them are real onomatopoeiae, i. e. words resembling the sound made by the thing of which they are the names.
- 1943, Henry George Farmer, Saʾadyah Gaon on the Influence of Music, London: A. Probsthain, page 76:
- Al-Khwarizmi, who follows Al-Farabi's definitions slavishly, introduces but two onomatopoeiae tan and tanna to represent relatively, it would seem, ˘ and ¯.
- 1912, Henri Alexandre Junod, The life of a South African tribe (Neuchatel: Attinger) p. 146 fn (1)
Latin
Pronunciation
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): [ɔ.nɔ.ma.tɔˈpoe̯.i.ae̯]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): [o.no.ma.t̪oˈpɛː.i.e]
Noun
onomatopoeïae
- inflection of onomatopoeïa:
- nominative/vocative plural
- genitive/dative singular