See also: Coffea

Latin edit

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

coffē̆a f (genitive coffē̆ae); first declension

  1. Alternative form of cafēa
    • 2014, Reijo Pitkäranta, Vis coffeae salutaris [1], Nuntii Latini 17.10.2014:
      Qui cotidie trina aut quaterna pocilla coffeae bibunt, paulo diutius quam alii vivere videntur.
      Those who drink three or four cups of coffee each day are seen to live a bit longer than others.
    • 2019 October 11, “Singapūrēnsēs bellum in diabētem gerunt”, in Nuntii Latini Occidentalis Studiorum Universitatis Vasintoniensis:
      Singapūrēnsium magistrātūs ēdīcent nē quis praecōnium ēdat quō cīvēs hortētur ut potiōnēs bibant saccharī plēnās. Inter tālēs potiōnēs habentur nōn sōlum potiōnēs spumantēs atque ēbullientēs, ut Cōca Cōla, sed etiam sūcus pōmōrum, et iōgurtum, et solūbilis coffēa seu potiō Arabica exsiccāta.
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)

Declension edit

First-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative coffē̆a coffē̆ae
Genitive coffē̆ae coffē̆ārum
Dative coffē̆ae coffē̆īs
Accusative coffē̆am coffē̆ās
Ablative coffē̆ā coffē̆īs
Vocative coffē̆a coffē̆ae

References edit

  • William Smith, Theophilus D[wight] Hall (1870) “coffee (plant)”, in A Copious and Critical English-Latin Dictionary, London: John Murray:coffēa Arabica