Latin edit

Etymology edit

ācri-, stem of ācer +‎ -culus

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

ācriculus (feminine ācricula, neuter ācriculum); first/second-declension adjective

  1. Diminutive of ācer (sharp; testy)
    • c. 45 BCE, Cicero, Tusculan Disputations 3.38.1:
      hoc dicit, et hoc ille acriculus me audiente Athenis senex Zeno, istorum acutissimus, contendere et magna voce dicere solebat: eum esse beatum, qui praesentibus voluptatibus frueretur confideretque se fruiturum aut in omni aut in magna parte vitae dolore non interveniente, aut si interveniret, si summus foret, futurum brevem, sin productior, plus habiturum iucundi quam mali
      • 1886 translation by Andrew P. Peabody[1]
        This, however, he does say, and this old Zeno, that sharp little man, the most acute of Epicureans, in my hearing at Athens used to argue and proclaim with a loud voice, namely, that he is happy who enjoys present pleasures, and expects to enjoy the like during most or all of his life, without the intervention of pain, or who, if pain intervenes, bears it in mind that if very severe, it must be brief, if prolonged, attended by more of enjoyment than of evil

Usage notes edit

This appears as a hapax legomenon in the corpus of Cicero's works in the passage quoted above. The difference in meaning between the diminutive and the base adjective is disputed: Lewis and Short defines it as "somewhat sharp, testy", i.e. as "ācer to a small extent" or "possessing a small amount of the quality described by the word ācer", but Petersen argues that this reading of the word as a "diminutive of quality" is incorrect, and that the diminutive instead has a deteriorative sense (serving to express a negative shade of emotion such as contempt) relative to the original adjective.[2]

Declension edit

First/second-declension adjective.

Number Singular Plural
Case / Gender Masculine Feminine Neuter Masculine Feminine Neuter
Nominative ācriculus ācricula ācriculum ācriculī ācriculae ācricula
Genitive ācriculī ācriculae ācriculī ācriculōrum ācriculārum ācriculōrum
Dative ācriculō ācriculō ācriculīs
Accusative ācriculum ācriculam ācriculum ācriculōs ācriculās ācricula
Ablative ācriculō ācriculā ācriculō ācriculīs
Vocative ācricule ācricula ācriculum ācriculī ācriculae ācricula

References edit

  1. ^ Andrew P. Peabody. Cicero's Tusculan disputations. 1886. Page 164
  2. ^ Petersen, Walter. Latin Diminution of Adjectives. II. Classical Philology , Jan., 1917, Vol. 12, No. 1 (Jan., 1917), pp. 49-67. (page 56)

Further reading edit

  • acriculus”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • acriculus”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers