suicidium

See also: Suicidium

Czech

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈsuɪt͡siːdɪjum]

Noun

suicidium n

  1. suicide
    Synonym: sebevražda

Declension

  • suicidalita
  • suicidální
  • suicidiální

Further reading

Latin

Etymology

From suī (genitive reflexive pronoun) +‎ -cīdium (act of killing or murder). Its use in modern Romance languages and New Latin is attested later than, and perhaps ultimately from, English suicide.[1] Suicida (self-killer), from suī +‎ -cīda (killer), is attested in Walter of Saint Victor's Contra quatuor labyrinthos Franciae (c. 1177), but both suicidium and suicida were otherwise unfound throughout the Middle Ages.[2]

Noun

suīcīdium n (genitive suīcīdiī); second declension

  1. (New Latin) suicide

Declension

Second-declension noun (neuter).

singular plural
nominative suīcīdium suīcīdia
genitive suīcīdiī suīcīdiōrum
dative suīcīdiō suīcīdiīs
accusative suīcīdium suīcīdia
ablative suīcīdiō suīcīdiīs
vocative suīcīdium suīcīdia

Synonyms

Descendants

All borrowed.

  • Asturian: suicidiu
  • Catalan: suïcidi
  • French: suicide
  • Friulian: suicidi
  • Galician: suicidio
  • Italian: suicidio
  • Portuguese: suicídio
  • Romanian: suicid
  • Russian: суици́д (suicíd)
  • Spanish: suicidio
  • Ukrainian: суїци́д (sujicýd)

References

  1. ^ Daube, David. “The Linguistics of Suicide.” Philosophy & Public Affairs, vol. 1, no. 4, 1972, pp. 387–437. JSTOR, [1]. Accessed 6 July 2023.
  2. ^ van Hooff, Anton J. L. “A Longer Life for ‘Suicide’: When Was the Latin Word for Self-Murderer Invented?” Romanische Forschungen, vol. 102, no. 2/3, 1990, pp. 255–59. JSTOR, [2]. Accessed 4 July 2023.