See also: Stiria

English edit

Etymology edit

From Latin stīria (icicle).

Noun edit

stiria (plural stiriae)

  1. An icicle-shaped concretion.
    • 1665, Robert Hooke, Micrographia, section I:
      the Microscope can afford us hundreds of Instances of Points many thousand times sharper: such as […] the ends of the stiriæ or small parallelipipeds of Amianthus […].

Anagrams edit

Latin edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Indo-European *ster- (stiff). Cognate with Latin stultus, stolidus, sterilis, strēnuus. See also Old English steorfan (to die), Latin torpeō, Lithuanian tirpstu (to become rigid), Old Church Slavonic трупети (trupeti).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

stīria f (genitive stīriae); first declension

  1. icicle, ice drop

Declension edit

First-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative stīria stīriae
Genitive stīriae stīriārum
Dative stīriae stīriīs
Accusative stīriam stīriās
Ablative stīriā stīriīs
Vocative stīria stīriae

Derived terms edit

Descendants edit

  • English: stiria
  • Sicilian: stizza (via an unattested Vulgar Latin intermediate form)

References edit

  • stiria”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • stiria”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
  • stiria”, in The Perseus Project (1999) Perseus Encyclopedia[1]
  • stiria”, in William Smith, editor (1854, 1857), A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography, volume 1 & 2, London: Walton and Maberly