See also: Thulé, Thulê, Thulē, and Thūlē

English edit

 
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Alternative forms edit

Etymology 1 edit

From the Middle English Tīle, Tȳle, from the Old English Tȳle, Thīla, Tīle (variants of Þȳle) and the Medieval Latin Tīle, from the Classical Latin Thūlē, Thȳlē, from the Ancient Greek Θούλη (Thoúlē), Θῡ́λη (Thū́lē), of unknown origin.[1]

Pronunciation edit

island in antiquity
historical Eskimo culture
airbase

Proper noun edit

Thule

  1. The semi-legendary island of classical antiquity considered to represent the northernmost location in the inhabited world (the Ecumene).
    • 1844, Edgar Allan Poe, The Works of the Late Edgar Allan Poe II (1859), “Dream-Land”, page 41, first stanza, lines 5–6:
      I have reached these lands but newly // From an ultimate dim Thule.
    • 1969, V.E. Watts (translator), Boëthius (author), The Consolation of Philosophy, bk III, ch. v, page 89:
      For distant India tremble may // Beneath your mighty rule, // And Thulé⁵ bow beneath your sway // Far in the Northern sea, // But if to care and want you’re prey, // No king are you, but slave.
    • ibidem, footnote 5:
      5. To the Romans Thulé, variously identified as Iceland or Mainland in the Shetland Isles, marked the extreme northern limit of the known world, just as India here stands for the farthest east.
  2. (historical) A nationalist and occultist group in Germany in the early 20th century, which included some of the founding members of the Nazi Party.
  3. The historical Eskimo culture extending from Alaska to Greenland between the 6th and 14th centuries.
  4. A settlement and airbase in northwestern Greenland established in 1910 by the Danish explorer Knud Rasmussen.
Derived terms edit
Related terms edit
Translations edit

Further reading edit

Etymology 2 edit

Clipping of Ultima Thule. Coined in January 2019 by the NASA team investigators of the New Horizons program (see quotations below).

Proper noun edit

Thule

  1. The smaller lobe of the trans-Neptunian object Ultima Thule, a contact binary object.
    • 2019 January 24, Stern, S. A., J. R. Spencer, H. A. Weaver, C. B. Olkin, J. M. Moore, W. Grundy, R. Gladstone et al., “Overview of initial results from the reconnaissance flyby of a Kuiper Belt planetesimal: 2014 MU69”, in arXiv[1]:
      For the purposes of discussion, MU69’s larger and smaller lobes have been informally designated “Ultima” and “Thule,” respectively, by the New Horizons team. Ultima and Thule have best-fit measured diameters of ~19.5 and ~14.2km, respectively, with errors of only a few percent at this time.
    • 2020, Umurhan, O. M., J. T. Keane, R. A. Beyer, M. Bird, I. Linscott, S. B. Porter, J. R. Spencer et al., “Thermophysical, Gravitational, and Geomorphology Properties of 2014 MU69”, in Abstracts of the 235th AAS Meeting (Honolulu, HI), page 717:
      Ultima and Thule have similar colors with measured albedos ∼0.06, indicating that UT is a typical member of the Cold Classical Kuiper Belt class of objects.
Coordinate terms edit
  • Ultima (the larger lobe of Ultima Thule)

References edit

  1. 1.0 1.1 Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed. "Thule". Oxford University Press (Oxford), 1989.
  2. ^ Oxford Dictionaries. "ultima Thule". Oxford University Press (Oxford), 2015.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Oxford Dictionaries. "Thule" (American). Oxford University Press (Oxford), 2015.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Oxford Dictionaries. "Thule" (British). Oxford University Press (Oxford), 2015.

Anagrams edit

Latin edit

 
Thule with the alternative orthography Tile.

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Ancient Greek Θούλη (Thoúlē, Thule).

Pronunciation edit

Proper noun edit

Thūlē f sg (genitive Thūlēs); first declension

  1. a legendary northern island, Thule
  2. (Medieval Latin) Iceland

Declension edit

First-declension noun (Greek-type), singular only.

Case Singular
Nominative Thūlē
Genitive Thūlēs
Dative Thūlae
Accusative Thūlēn
Ablative Thūlē
Vocative Thūlē

Descendants edit

  • English: Thule
  • French: Thulé

References edit