apella
Translingual
editEtymology
editPossibly from Swedish apa (“primate, ape, monkey”) Latin -ella (diminutive suffix).
Noun
editapella
- used as a specific epithet
Derived terms
editEnglish
editEtymology
editFrom Ancient Greek ἀπέλλα (apélla), which originally meant fold, fence for animals.
- Hesychius of Alexandria: apellai (ἀπέλλαι), sekoi (σηκοί: folds), ecclesiai (εκκλησίαι: popular assemblies): Nilsson, Vol I, p. 556
Noun
editapella (plural apellai)
- (Ancient Greece, politics) The popular deliberative assembly in the Ancient Greek city-state of Sparta, corresponding to the ecclesia in most other Greek states.
Translations
editFurther reading
editAnagrams
editAragonese
editPronunciation
editNoun
editapella f (plural apellas) (central Aragonese)
- Alternative form of abella (“bee”)
References
edit- Ralph Penny (2000) Variation and Change in Spanish, Cambridge University Press, page 25
Finnish
editNoun
editapella
Anagrams
editLatin
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editA misinterpretation of the proper name Apella as used in Horace, given a folk etymology as a- pellis (“skin”).
Pronunciation
edit- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): /aˈpel.la/, [äˈpɛlːʲä]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /aˈpel.la/, [äˈpɛlːä]
Noun
editapella m (genitive apellae); first declension
- one that is circumcised; a Jew
- Synonym: verpus
- 1609, Adam(us) Proserchomus, Ad Sixtum Palmam :[1]
- David Apellarum rex
- David, king of the Jews
- David Apellarum rex
Declension
editFirst-declension noun.
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | apella | apellae |
genitive | apellae | apellārum |
dative | apellae | apellīs |
accusative | apellam | apellās |
ablative | apellā | apellīs |
vocative | apella | apellae |
References
edit- ^ Miloslav Okál, Michiel Verweij (1994) “Les pensées politiques, religieuses et culturelles d'Adam Proserchomus, poète slovaque de la Réforme. Avec une édition du Threnus astraeae (1611)”, in Humanistica Lovaniensia, number 43, page 404
- Encyclopædia Britannica, 3rd edition, volume 2, 1797, page 111
- Francis Holyoke (1612) Riders Dictionarie corrected, and with the addition of above five hundred Words enriched. Hereunto is annexed a Dictionarie Etymologicall [...][1], 3rd edition, Oxford
- Christopher Wase (1675) Dictionarium Minus: A Compendious Dictionary, English-Latin & Latin-English. [...][2], 2nd edition
- Apella, æ, A Jew, one of the Concision.
- Thomas Elyot (1490?-1546) The dictionary of syr Thomas Eliot knyght[3]. Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership, 2011, accessed 26 January 2023.
Categories:
- Translingual terms derived from Swedish
- Translingual terms derived from Latin
- Translingual lemmas
- Translingual nouns
- English terms derived from Ancient Greek
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English nouns with irregular plurals
- en:Ancient Greece
- en:Politics
- Aragonese terms with IPA pronunciation
- Rhymes:Aragonese/eʎa
- Rhymes:Aragonese/eʎa/3 syllables
- Aragonese lemmas
- Aragonese nouns
- Aragonese countable nouns
- Aragonese feminine nouns
- Finnish non-lemma forms
- Finnish noun forms
- Latin 3-syllable words
- Latin terms with IPA pronunciation
- Latin lemmas
- Latin nouns
- Latin first declension nouns
- Latin masculine nouns in the first declension
- Latin masculine nouns
- Latin terms with quotations