padulis
Latin edit
Etymology edit
From Classical Latin palūd-, via metathesis. Attested in a Visigothic forgery made circa 800 CE, apparently based on an older document from the sixth century.[1] Thereafter common in Iberian texts.
Noun edit
padūlis f (genitive padūlis); third declension (Late Latin ?, Early Medieval Latin)
Declension edit
Third-declension noun (i-stem).
Case | Singular | Plural |
---|---|---|
Nominative | padūlis | padūlēs |
Genitive | padūlis | padūlium |
Dative | padūlī | padūlibus |
Accusative | padūlem | padūlēs padūlīs |
Ablative | padūle | padūlibus |
Vocative | padūlis | padūlēs |
Descendants edit
- see: palūs
References edit
- ^ Wiener, Leo. 1917. Contributions toward a history of Arabico-Gothic culture, vol. I. New York: Neale. 116–119.