farinosus

Latin

Etymology

Found in Late and Vulgar Latin. From farīna (flour, meal) + -ōsus.

Pronunciation

Adjective

farīnōsus (feminine farīnōsa, neuter farīnōsum); first/second-declension adjective

  1. floury, mealy
  2. (New Latin) Used as a specific epithet

Declension

First/second-declension adjective.

Number Singular Plural
Case / Gender Masculine Feminine Neuter Masculine Feminine Neuter
Nominative farīnōsus farīnōsa farīnōsum farīnōsī farīnōsae farīnōsa
Genitive farīnōsī farīnōsae farīnōsī farīnōsōrum farīnōsārum farīnōsōrum
Dative farīnōsō farīnōsō farīnōsīs
Accusative farīnōsum farīnōsam farīnōsum farīnōsōs farīnōsās farīnōsa
Ablative farīnōsō farīnōsā farīnōsō farīnōsīs
Vocative farīnōse farīnōsa farīnōsum farīnōsī farīnōsae farīnōsa

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Aromanian: fãrinos
  • Asturian: fariñosu
  • Catalan: farinós
  • English: farinose
  • French: farineux
  • Friulian: farinôs
  • Italian: farinoso
  • Occitan: farinós
  • Portuguese: farinhoso
  • Romanian: făinos
  • Sardinian: farinosu
  • Sicilian: farinusu
  • Spanish: harinoso
  • Venetian: farinoxo

References

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