pipio

Latin

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

    Of imitative origin.

    Verb

    pīpiō (present infinitive pīpiāre); first conjugation, no passive, no perfect or supine stems

    1. to chirp, to pipe
    Conjugation

    Etymology 2

    From the previous verb.

    Verb

    pīpiō (present infinitive pīpiāre, perfect active pīpiāvī, supine pīpiātum); first conjugation

    1. (intransitive) to whimper
    2. (transitive) to pour out (whimpers)
    Conjugation

    Etymology 3

      From pīpiō (to chirp) +‎ (noun-forming suffix).

      Noun

      pīpiō m (genitive pīpiōnis); third declension

      1. (Late Latin) chirping bird
      2. (Late Latin) squab
      Declension

      Third-declension noun.

      singular plural
      nominative pīpiō pīpiōnēs
      genitive pīpiōnis pīpiōnum
      dative pīpiōnī pīpiōnibus
      accusative pīpiōnem pīpiōnēs
      ablative pīpiōne pīpiōnibus
      vocative pīpiō pīpiōnēs
      Descendants
      • Italo-Romance:
        • Italian: pippione (archaic)
        • Neapolitan: piccione, peccione
          • Italian: piccione (see there for further descendants)
        • Sicilian: picciuni
      • North Italian:
        • Lombard: pivion
        • Piedmontese: pivion
      • Gallo-Romance:

      References