See also: bacchanal

English edit

Adjective edit

Bacchanal (comparative more Bacchanal, superlative most Bacchanal)

  1. Alternative form of bacchanal

German edit

Pronunciation edit

  • Audio:(file)
  • Rhymes: -aːl

Noun edit

Bacchanal n (strong, genitive Bacchanals, plural Bacchanale or Bacchanalien)

  1. bacchanalia

Declension edit

Latin edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Baccha.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

Bacchānal n sg (genitive Bacchānālis); third declension (chiefly plural only)

  1. Bacchanalia
    • 183 BCE, CIL I2 581 3–6, in Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, volume I fascicle 2, Ernst Lommatzch & Theodor Mommsen (editors), Berlin, 1918, page 437:
      NEIQVIS·EORVM·SACANAL[sic]·HABVISE·VELET·SEI·QVES
      ESENT·QVEI·SIBEI·DEICERENT·NECESVS·ESE·BACANAL·HABERE·EEIS·VTEI·AD·PR·VRBANVM
      ROMAM·VENIRENT·DEQVE·EEIS·REBVS·VBEI·EORVM·VER[B]A·AVDITA·ESENT·VTEI·SENATVS
      NOSTER·DECERNERET·DVM·NE·MINVS·SENATOR[I]BVS·C·ADESENT·QVOM·EA·RE·COSOLORETVR
      Let no one of them hold Bacchanalia. If anybody
      says that it's necessary for them to hold Bacchanalia, let them come to Rome
      to the urban prefect and, when his words regarding the affair have been heard, let our
      senate decide, provided that no less than 100 senators are present when that matter is discussed.

Declension edit

Third-declension noun (neuter, “pure” i-stem), singular only.

Case Singular
Nominative Bacchānal
Genitive Bacchānālis
Dative Bacchānālī
Accusative Bacchānal
Ablative Bacchānālī
Vocative Bacchānal

Derived terms edit