Latin

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Etymology

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Sense 1 ultimately from sēmi- (half) and sēsqui- (one and a half): perhaps compare the sē̆- of sē̆lībra (half-pound), sēmodius (half-pack). Sense 2 ultimately from sex (six): perhaps compare the sē- of sēdecim, sēnus, sēmēnstris, sēvir, although the development of -ex- to -ē- was only phonetically regular before a voiced consonant. It is possible that some cases are simply misspellings by omission of a letter.

Adjective

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sē̆cuplus (feminine sē̆cupla, neuter sē̆cuplum); first/second-declension adjective

  1. (Late Latin, Medieval Latin) Alternative form of sēscuplus (one and a half times as much)
  2. (Late Latin, Medieval Latin) Alternative form of sexcuplus (six times as much)
    • Huguccio Pisanus, Derivationes :
      Et sunt illa vocabula hec: simplus, duplus, triplus, quadruplus, quincuplus, secuplus vel sescuplus, septuplus, octuplus, nuncuplus, decuplus, undecuplus, duodecuplus, tredecuplus, quatuordecuplus, quindecuplus, sedecuplus vel sesdecuplus...

Declension

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First/second-declension adjective.

Number Singular Plural
Case / Gender Masculine Feminine Neuter Masculine Feminine Neuter
Nominative sē̆cuplus sē̆cupla sē̆cuplum sē̆cuplī sē̆cuplae sē̆cupla
Genitive sē̆cuplī sē̆cuplae sē̆cuplī sē̆cuplōrum sē̆cuplārum sē̆cuplōrum
Dative sē̆cuplō sē̆cuplō sē̆cuplīs
Accusative sē̆cuplum sē̆cuplam sē̆cuplum sē̆cuplōs sē̆cuplās sē̆cupla
Ablative sē̆cuplō sē̆cuplā sē̆cuplō sē̆cuplīs
Vocative sē̆cuple sē̆cupla sē̆cuplum sē̆cuplī sē̆cuplae sē̆cupla

References

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