vulgus
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]vulgus (plural vulguses)
- (UK, education, historical) A school exercise in which pupils are tasked with writing a short piece of Greek or Latin verse on a given subject.
- 1857, Thomas Hughes, Tom Brown's School Days:
- So the table was cleared, the cloth restored, and the three fell to work with Gradus and dictionary upon the morning's vulgus.
Latin
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]May be from Proto-Italic *wolgos or *welgos, perhaps from Proto-Indo-European *welH- (“to throng, crowd”), whence also Welsh gwala (“sufficiency, enough”), Middle Breton gwalc'h (“abundance”), Sanskrit वर्ग (varga, “group, division”); see also Latin volvō (“I roll, turn over”) for the same or a similar root.
Some have attempted, without success, to link it to Proto-Indo-European *pl̥h₁-go-, whence English folk.
Pronunciation
[edit]- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): /ˈu̯ul.ɡus/, [ˈu̯ʊɫ̪ɡʊs̠]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /ˈvul.ɡus/, [ˈvulɡus]
Noun
[edit]vulgus n sg or m sg (genitive vulgī); second declension
- (uncountable) the common people
- (uncountable) the public
- throng, crowd
- gathering
Declension
[edit]Second declension, usually nominative/accusative/vocative in -us.
singular | |
---|---|
nominative | vulgus |
genitive | vulgī |
dative | vulgō |
accusative | vulgus vulgum |
ablative | vulgō |
vocative | vulgus vulge |
Second declension neuter, nominative/accusative/vocative in -us. Also rarely encountered as a regular masculine second declension noun.
There is also the heteroclitic ablative singular vulgū.
Derived terms
[edit]Related terms
[edit]Descendants
[edit]References
[edit]- “vulgus”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- vulgus in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition with additions by D. P. Carpenterius, Adelungius and others, edited by Léopold Favre, 1883–1887)
- vulgus in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
- Carl Meißner, Henry William Auden (1894) Latin Phrase-Book[1], London: Macmillan and Co.
- to divulge, make public: efferre or edere aliquid in vulgus
- to be a subject for gossip: in ora vulgi abire
- a demagogue, agitator: plebis dux, vulgi turbator, civis turbulentus, civis rerum novarum cupidus
- to divulge, make public: efferre or edere aliquid in vulgus
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- British English
- en:Education
- English terms with historical senses
- English terms with quotations
- Latin terms inherited from Proto-Italic
- Latin terms derived from Proto-Italic
- Latin terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Latin 2-syllable words
- Latin terms with IPA pronunciation
- Latin lemmas
- Latin nouns
- Latin second declension nouns
- Latin neuter nouns in the second declension
- Latin masculine nouns in the second declension
- Latin neuter nouns
- Latin masculine nouns
- Latin nouns with multiple genders
- Latin uncountable nouns
- Latin words in Meissner and Auden's phrasebook