Brunonis vicus
Latin
Alternative forms
- Brūnsvīcum
- Brūnōnis Vīcus
Etymology
Probably a calque of an Old Saxon name first attested in 1031 as Brunesguik: Brūnōnis (genitive form of Brūnō, itself a Latinisation of the Old Saxon Brūn and/or Old High German Brūn, i.e. St. Bruno of Saxony (d. 880), legendary founder of the settlement in 861) + vīcus (“village, (in Medieval Latin also) merchants’ settlement, centre for river-fishing or shipping”); at its founding, the settlement stood near a ford across the River Oker = “Bruno’s village” ≈ “Brownswick”. Compare the modern Low German name for the city (Brunswiek) and the English -wick.
Pronunciation
- (Classical) IPA(key): /bruːˈnoː.nis ˈu̯iː.kus/, [bruːˈnoːnɪs̠ ˈu̯iːkʊs̠]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /bruˈno.nis ˈvi.kus/, [bruˈnɔːnis ˈviːkus]
Proper noun
Brūnōnis vīcus m sg (genitive Brūnōnis vīcī); second declension
- Braunschweig, Brunswick (city in Lower Saxony, Germany)
Declension
Indeclinable portion with a second-declension noun, with locative, singular only.
Case | Singular |
---|---|
Nominative | Brūnōnis vīcus |
Genitive | Brūnōnis vīcī |
Dative | Brūnōnis vīcō |
Accusative | Brūnōnis vīcum |
Ablative | Brūnōnis vīcō |
Vocative | Brūnōnis vīce |
Locative | Brūnōnis vīcī |
Derived terms
Further reading
Brunsvicum on the Latin Wikipedia.Wikipedia la
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