Cosacus
Latin
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editThrough Polish, Serbo-Croatian or Hungarian according to the author, all three coming through Ukrainian from Old East Slavic козакъ (kozakŭ), itself from Old Turkic 𐰴𐰔𐰍𐰸 (qazǧag, “profiteer”).
Noun
editCosacus m (genitive Cosacī, feminine Cosaca); second declension
- (New Latin) Cossack
- 1710 April 5, Philippus Orlik, chapter XI, in Pacta et Constitutiones legum libertatumque Exercitus Zaporoviensis[1], Bender:
- Viduae Cosacorum uxores orbataque illorum proles, domus Cosaticae et uxores, eorum absentibus maritis, cum operi belli vel quibuscunque servitiis militaribus accincti fuerint, ne ad ulla ferenda plebi debita ac communia onera adigantur, extorsionibus tributariis aggraventur pactum sancitumque est.
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- 1797, Franjo Ksaver Pejačević, “Chronica Serbica Despotae Georgii Branković”, in Arkiv za povjestnicu jugoslavensku[2], volume III, Zagreb, published 1854, page 30:
- 7125–1617. finito, et 7126–1618 veniente, exit Skender pasca contra Cosacos in terram Lehicham, minorem Russiam, et tunc advenit Bethlen Gabro et Radul Bogdaniae et Alexander Valachiae, verum non multi ceciderunt, et nonnullae palancae duntaxat incensae sunt. Postremo venit etiam perfidus Tatarus Cantamir, et populatus est minorem Russiam et 53 millia hominum praeter peccora abduxit.
- In the ending year 7125–1617 and beginning 7126–1618 Skender leaves the meadows against the Cossacks into Lechic earth, Little Russia, and then comes Bethlen Gabro and Radul of Bogdania and Alexander of Wallachia, but some fell, and some palankas at least have been set on fire. Later comes also the perfidious Tatar Cantamir, and populates Little Russia and abducts 53 thousand humans apart from livestock.
Declension
editFirst/second-declension adjective.
Number | Singular | Plural | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Case / Gender | Masculine | Feminine | Masculine | Feminine | |
Nominative | Cosacus | Cosaca | Cosacī | Cosacae | |
Genitive | Cosacī | Cosacae | Cosacōrum | Cosacārum | |
Dative | Cosacō | Cosacīs | Cosacīs | ||
Accusative | Cosacum | Cosacam | Cosacōs | Cosacās | |
Ablative | Cosacō | Cosacā | Cosacīs | Cosacīs | |
Vocative | Cosace | Cosaca | Cosacī | Cosacae |