See also: ulus and Ulus

Translingual edit

Etymology edit

From Latin -ulus (diminutive suffix).

Suffix edit

-ulus

  1. (taxonomy) used to form genus names, especially from other genus names, indicating smaller size

Latin edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Italic *-elos (whence Faliscan -𐌄𐌋𐌏𐌔 (-elos)), from Proto-Indo-European *-elós, thematized from Proto-Indo-European *-lós.[1]

Cognate with Proto-Germanic *-ilaz and *-ulaz, whence no longer productive English -le (as in dimple and nozzle), Dutch -el, German -el.

Pronunciation edit

Suffix edit

-ulus (feminine -ula, neuter -ulum); first/second-declension suffix

  1. Used to form a diminutive of a noun, indicating small size or youth.
  2. Used to form a diminutive of an adjective with diminished effect, indicating “somewhat” or “-ish”.
  3. Used to form an agent noun or adjective from a verb.

Usage notes edit

The suffix -ulus is added to a noun to form a diminutive of that noun. Latin diminutives typically match the gender of the base word.

Examples:
rēx m (king) + ‎-ulus → ‎rēgulus m (prince, petty king)
virga f (twig, rod, switch, staff) + ‎-ulus → ‎virgula f (little twig, small rod, wand)
oppidum n (town, settlement) + ‎-ulus → ‎oppidulum n (small town or settlement, village)
calx f (limestone, game counter) + ‎-ulus → ‎calculus m (pebble, little stone)

The allomorph -olus, -ola, -olum is regularly used to form diminutives of nouns ending in -ius, -ia, -ium, -eus, -ea, -eum.

When added to an adjective, it forms a diminutive of that adjective:

albus (white) + ‎-ulus → ‎albulus (whitish, literally a little white)

When added to a verb, it forms an adjective with the relational meaning “doing …” or “tending to …”:

tremō (tremble) + ‎-ulus → ‎tremulus (trembling, tending to tremble)
crēdō (believe) + ‎-ulus → ‎crēdulus (believing, tending to believe)

Declension edit

First/second-declension adjective.

Number Singular Plural
Case / Gender Masculine Feminine Neuter Masculine Feminine Neuter
Nominative -ulus -ula -ulum -ulī -ulae -ula
Genitive -ulī -ulae -ulī -ulōrum -ulārum -ulōrum
Dative -ulō -ulō -ulīs
Accusative -ulum -ulam -ulum -ulōs -ulās -ula
Ablative -ulō -ulā -ulō -ulīs
Vocative -ule -ula -ulum -ulī -ulae -ula

Derived terms edit

Descendants edit

  • English: -ule
  • Galician: , -oa (no longer productive)
  • Greek: -ούλα (-oúla)
  • Italian: -olo, -ola
  • Sicilian: -ulu, -ula
  • Spanish: -uelo, -uela

References edit

  1. ^ de Goede, Tim (2014) de Vaan, Michiel, editors, Derivational Morphology: New Perspectives on the Italo-Celtic Hypothesis (Research master thesis)[1], Leiden University, pages 14-15