Italian edit

Etymology edit

Learned borrowing from Latin animula, diminutive of anima (soul).

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /aˈni.mu.la/
  • Rhymes: -imula
  • Hyphenation: a‧nì‧mu‧la

Noun edit

animula f (plural animule)

  1. (literary) Diminutive of anima: a small or little soul
    • 1918, Ada Negri, “Alessandrina Ravizza (1846–1915)”, in Orazioni, Milan: Fratelli Treves editori, page 34:
      Penetrò, con il proprio istinto psicologico che non fallava mai, nell’intimo di quelle animule, pozzi profondi d’acqua avvelenata.
      With her infallible psychological instinct, she penetrated in the innermost part of those little souls, deep wells of poisoned water.
  2. (literary, figurative) a sensitive person
  3. (archaeology) a depiction of a deceased's soul

Related terms edit

Further reading edit

  • animula in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana

Anagrams edit

Latin edit

Etymology edit

anima (soul) +‎ -ula (diminutive suffix)

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

animula f (genitive animulae); first declension

  1. a small soul, spirit, life
    • 76 CE – 108 CE, Hadrian, Carmina 3:
      Animula vagula blandula,
      hospes comesque corporis,
      quae nunc abībis in loca
      pallidula, rigida, nūdula,
      nec ut solēs dabis iocōs...
      • Translation by Wikisource
        Little soul, wandering, pleasing,
        guest and companion of the body,
        which now go away in places
        pale, stiff, bare,
        and will not jest as you do...
    • 1611, Johannes Kepler, Strena seu de nive sexangula 11:
      Has igitur rationes materialem necessitatem respicientes ita puto sufficere, ut hoc loco non existimem philosophandum de perfectione et pulrhritudine vel nobilitate figurae rhombicae: neque satagendum, ut essentia animulae quae est in ape, ex contemplatione figurae, quam fabricatur, eliciatur.
      These therefore are the reasons considering the material necessity, so I think it sufficient that at this point I do not consider philosophizing about the perfection, beauty, or nobility of the rhombic shape, nor fussing that the essence of the small soul which is in the bee is elicited from a meditation on the shape that is built.

Declension edit

First-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative animula animulae
Genitive animulae animulārum
Dative animulae animulīs
Accusative animulam animulās
Ablative animulā animulīs
Vocative animula animulae

Related terms edit

References edit

  • animula”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • animula”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
  • animula in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.