Latin

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Etymology

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From reciprocus (returning)cornū (horn).

Pronunciation

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Adjective

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reciprocicornis (neuter reciprocicorne); third-declension two-termination adjective

  1. (hapax) with horns curved backwards
    • c. 160 CEc. 225 CE, Tertullian, De Pallio 1.3:
      Equidem haud mīror prae documentō superiōre. Nam et ariētem (nōn quem Laberius reciprocicornem ait, lānicutem et testitrahum, sed trabēs māchina est quae mūrōs frangere mīlitat) nēminī unquam adhūc lībrātum illa dicitur Carthago, 'studiīs asperrima bellī', prīma omnium armāsse in oscillum pendulī impetūs, commentāta vim tormentī dēbile pecoris caput vindicantis.
      I'm not surprised at all on account of a previous example. For the ram too (not the one whom Laberius calls reciprocally-horned, wooly-skinned and testicle-dragging, but the siege weapon that smashes walls), not swung into anyone yet, Carthage, 'the toughest in the arts of war', is said to have first mobilised in the oscillation of violence, having realised the power of the engine by analogy of the anger of the beast that avenges itself with its head.

Declension

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Third-declension two-termination adjective.

singular plural
masc./fem. neuter masc./fem. neuter
nominative reciprocicornis reciprocicorne reciprocicornēs reciprocicornia
genitive reciprocicornis reciprocicornium
dative reciprocicornī reciprocicornibus
accusative reciprocicornem reciprocicorne reciprocicornēs
reciprocicornīs
reciprocicornia
ablative reciprocicornī reciprocicornibus
vocative reciprocicornis reciprocicorne reciprocicornēs reciprocicornia

References

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