cacida

Latin

Etymology

Derived from caca (faeces) via a process comparable to the one that resulted in *pippīta < Classical pītuīta. Attested in Tironian notes. The expected spelling of the medial consonant, considering the voicelessness reflected in all the descendants, would have been ⟨cc⟩ not ⟨c⟩.

Noun

cacīda f (genitive cacīdae); first declension (Early Medieval Latin)

  1. rheum (discharge from the corner of one's eye)

Declension

First-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative cacīda cacīdae
Genitive cacīdae cacīdārum
Dative cacīdae cacīdīs
Accusative cacīdam cacīdās
Ablative cacīdā cacīdīs
Vocative cacīda cacīdae

Descendants

  • Old French: chacie, chacide, chacede; chassie, chacive; cachie, chachie
    • French: chassie
    • Picard: cachive
  • Occitan: cassida, chassida
  • Piedmontese: scassia, scasseia

References

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