See also: Quique

Latin edit

Etymology 1 edit

See lemma.

Pronoun edit

quīque

  1. masculine nominative/vocative plural of quisque (adjectival pronoun)

Etymology 2 edit

quī + -que (and)

Pronoun edit

quīque

  1. and who/which
    • 29 BCE – 19 BCE, Virgil, Aeneid 12.704–707:
      Iam vērō et Rutulī certātim et Trōes et omnēs
      convertēre oculōs Italī, quīque alta tenēbant
      moenia, quīque īmōs pulsābant arjete mūrōs,
      armaque dēposuēre umerīs.
      Now, fiercely, both the Rutuli and Troyans and all the Itali
      turned their eyes [to Aeneas and Turnus], and those who held
      the high walls as well as those who besieged the walls
      put away their weapons from their shoulders.
    • 158 CE, Apuleius, Apologia 1.1:
      Certus equidem eram prōque vērō obtinēbam, Māxime Cl. quīque in cōnsiliō estis, Sicinium Aemiliānum, senem nōtissimae temeritātis, accūsātiōnem meī prius apud tē coeptam quam apud sē cōgitātam pēnūriā crīminum sōlīs convīciīs implētūrum.
      Maximus Claudius, and you who are members of the council, I was personally certain and took it as true that Sicinius Aemilianus, an old man of notorious recklessness, in spite of noticing a lack of crimes [in me], was about to use nothing but noise to fill an accusation of my person, which he began before he thought it through.
    • 5th century CE, anonymous, Pervigilium Veneris :
      Crās amet quī numquam amāvit quīque amāvit crās amet.
      May whoever has not loved love tomorrow, and may whoever has loved love tomorrow too.

Portuguese edit

Verb edit

quique

  1. inflection of quicar:
    1. first/third-person singular present subjunctive
    2. third-person singular imperative

Spanish edit

 
Spanish Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia es
 
un quique

Etymology edit

From Mapudungun kiki.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /ˈkike/ [ˈki.ke]
  • Rhymes: -ike
  • Syllabification: qui‧que

Noun edit

quique m (plural quiques)

  1. (zoology, Chile) grison, lesser grison
    Synonym: hurón menor

Further reading edit