medalia

See also: medalía

Latin

Etymology

Substantiviation of mediālia (with loss of the first /j/ via dissimilation), neuter plural of Late Latin mediālis (middle, adj), from Classical Latin medius + -ālis. Attested in a ninth-century gloss, with the sense of 'half a denarius', the predominant meaning in Romance. Non-numismatic senses remain, however, in Sardinian and regional Catalan, Spanish, and Portuguese.[1]

Noun

medālia f (genitive medāliae); first declension (Early Medieval Latin)

  1. that which is in the middle
  2. type of coin worth half a denarius

Inflection

First-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative medālia medāliae
Genitive medāliae medāliārum
Dative medāliae medāliīs
Accusative medāliam medāliās
Ablative medāliā medāliīs
Vocative medālia medāliae

Descendants

  • Italo-Romance:
    • Old Italian: medalgla
      • Italian: medaglia (see there for further descendants)
      • → Old Sardinian: metagia
  • North Italian:
    • Friulian: medaie
    • Old Ligurian: meaia
    • Old Lombard: megaglia
    • Old Venetian: medaie pl
  • Gallo-Romance:
    • Old Catalan: mesala, mealla, maalla
    • Old Franco-Provençal: mealla
    • Old French: meaille, maaille
    • Old Occitan: mezailha, mialha
  • Ibero-Romance:
  • Insular Romance:
    • Old Sassarese: medaça
    • Sardinian: meaza (unit of capacity) (Logudorese)

References

  • Wagner, Max Leopold (1960–1964) “meádza”, in Dizionario etimologico sardo, Heidelberg
  1. Walther von Wartburg (1928–2002) “medialis”, in Französisches Etymologisches Wörterbuch (in German), volumes 6/1: Mabile–Mephitis, page 574

Romanian

Etymology

Back-formation from medaliat

Verb

a medalia (third-person singular present medaliează, past participle medaliat) 1st conj.

  1. to medal

Conjugation

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