Latin edit

Etymology edit

From fulciō (to prop up) +‎ pēs (foot).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

fulcipedia f (genitive fulcipediae); first declension

  1. (hapax) The meaning of this term is uncertain. Possibilities include:
    1. 'propfoot, of a drunken woman, who needs support', as defined in the Lewis and Short Latin Dictionary
    2. a woman 'standing on her dignity', according to the Oxford Latin Dictionary
    3. 'high-heeled hussy', as rendered in Michael Heseltine's 1913 Loeb Classical Library translation
    • c. 27 CE – 66 CE, Petronius, Satyricon 75:
      Puerum bāsiāvī frūgālissimum, non propter fōrmam, sed quia frūgī est: decem partēs dīcit, librum ab oculō legit, thraecium sibi dē diāriīs fēcit, arcisellium dē suō parāvit et duās trullās. Nōn est dignus quem in oculīs feram? Sed Fortūnāta vetat. Ita tibi vidētur, fulcipedia? Suādeō, bonum tuum concoquās, milva, et mē nōn faciās ringentem, amasiuncula: aliōquīn experīris cerebrum meum.
      I kissed the virtuous boy, not because of his looks, but because he's worthy: he says the multiplication of ten, reads a book from sight, got himself a Thracian suit of armour from his daily allowance, bought a round-backed chair from his own money and two ladles. Is he not worthy to hold dear? But Fortunata is against it. Do you see it that way, fulcipedia? I advise you to put up with your good life, she-kite, and not make me angry, dear: otherwise you're testing my brain.

Declension edit

First-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative fulcipedia fulcipediae
Genitive fulcipediae fulcipediārum
Dative fulcipediae fulcipediīs
Accusative fulcipediam fulcipediās
Ablative fulcipediā fulcipediīs
Vocative fulcipedia fulcipediae

Related terms edit

References edit