-osus - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Likely reflects a derivation *-h₃d-s-o- from Proto-Indo-European *h₃édos ~ *h₃édesos (“smell”),[1][2] whence odor. Originally meaning “smelling like”, as evidenced possibly by hircōsus (“smelling like a goat”) and vinōsus (“fond of wine, *reeking of wine?”), it would have later generalised into “full of”. Compare related Ancient Greek -ώδης (-ṓdēs, “smelling like; full of”) and Old Armenian -ոտ (-ot) which underwent the same semantic change.
Alternatively, a derivation from Proto-Indo-European *-wénts has also been proposed, through a form such as *-wont-to- by suffixiation of *-tós.[3]
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): /oː.sus/, [oːs̠ʊs̠]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /o.sus/, [os̬us]
-ōsus (feminine -ōsa, neuter -ōsum); first/second-declension suffix
First/second-declension adjective.
Descendants
- Aromanian: -os, -osu
- Asturian: -osu
- Catalan: -ós
- Franco-Provençal: -ox
- Old French: -us, -eus, -eux, -os, -ous
- Friulian: -ôs
- Italian: -oso
- Occitan: -ós
- Old Galician-Portuguese: -oso
- Romanian: -os
- Sardinian: -osu, -ossu
- Sicilian: -usu
- → Maltese: -uż
- Old Spanish: -oso
- Spanish: -oso
- Venetan: -oxo, -óxo
- → Proto-Brythonic: *-ʉs
- → French: -ose
- ^ Niedermann, Max (1899) Studien zur Geschichte der lateinischen Wortbildung [Studies on the history of Latin word formation], →DOI, page 246
- ^ Weiss, Michael L. (2009) Outline of the Historical and Comparative Grammar of Latin[1], Ann Arbor: Beech Stave Press, →ISBN, § 23, page 296
- ^ Haudry, Jean (1979) L'indo-européen, page 58