Latin edit

Etymology edit

From a reinterpretation of *nārīcae pl as nārīcem sg, these being homophones. Attested in the ninth-century manuscript quoted below (where, being in a glossary, it may represent recycled older material).

Noun edit

nārīx f (genitive nārīcis); third declension (Early Medieval Latin)

  1. nostril
    • “Nar” in Excerpta ex codice Cassinensi 402[1]
      Nar generis neutrius nomen est fluuii nam de naso hęc naris huius naris dicitur plurali hęc narices
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)

Declension edit

Third-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative nārīx nārīcēs
Genitive nārīcis nārīcum
Dative nārīcī nārīcibus
Accusative nārīcem nārīcēs
Ablative nārīce nārīcibus
Vocative nārīx nārīcēs

Derived terms edit

Descendants edit

  • Italo-Romance:
    • Italian: narice
    • Sicilian: narici
  • North Italian:
  • Gallo-Romance:
  • Ibero-Romance:

References edit

  1. ^ Gustav Löwe (1894) Corpus glossariorum Latinorum (in Latin), volume V, page 573