-ius

See also: ius, Ius, and IUs

Translingual

Etymology

    Borrowed from Latin -ius.

    Suffix

    -ius

    1. Latinizing suffix
    2. suffix for making genera eponymous of a male person

    Derived terms

    Latin

    Pronunciation

    Etymology 1

      From Old Latin -ios, from Proto-Italic *-jos, from Proto-Indo-European *-yós. Cognate with Ancient Greek -ῐος (-ĭos).

      Suffix

      -ius (feminine -ia, neuter -ium); first/second-declension suffix

      1. forming adjectives from nouns
      2. found as an ending of most Classical Latin 'nomina gentilicia' (family names or surnames, shared by the members of a gens)
      3. (New Latin) suffix for Latinizing surnames
      Usage notes

      The suffix -ius is added to a noun to form an adjective indicating "made of" or "belonging to" that noun.

      Examples:
      pater (father) + ‎-ius → ‎patrius (paternal)
      rēx (king, ruler) + ‎-ius → ‎rēgius (kingly, royal)
      uxor (wife) + ‎-ius → ‎uxōrius (uxorious)
      papȳrus (papyrus) + ‎-ius → ‎papȳrius (made of papyrus)

      In taxonomics,[1] out of analogy with ancient Roman nomina gentilicia, this suffix is added to surnames ending in a consonant other than the ending -er and, sometimes, replacing a mute final -e.

      Examples:
      French Descartes + ‎-ius → ‎Cartesius
      German Leibniz + ‎-ius → ‎Leibnitius
      German Schmalz + ‎-ius → ‎Smalcius
      English Shakespeare + ‎-ius → ‎Shakespeārius
      Declension

      First/second-declension adjective.

      singular plural
      masculine feminine neuter masculine feminine neuter
      nominative -ius -ia -ium -iī -iae -ia
      genitive -iī -iae -iī -iōrum -iārum -iōrum
      dative -iō -iae -iō -iīs
      accusative -ium -iam -ium -iōs -iās -ia
      ablative -iō -iā -iō -iīs
      vocative -ie -ia -ium -iī -iae -ia
      Synonyms
      Derived terms
      Latin terms suffixed with -ius

      References

      1. ^ Etymology: The Latinization of Modern Surnames for Species Names (July 29th), 29.07.2014, https://iam-discite.tumblr.com/post/93215833830/etymology-the-latinization-of-modern-surnames-for

      Etymology 2

        See -ior (suffix forming adjectives’ comparative degrees).

        Suffix

        -ius

        1. nominative/accusative/vocative neuter singular of -ior

        Etymology 3

        See (suffix forming adverbs).

        Suffix

        -ius

        1. comparative degree of adverbs ending in -ō

        Etymology 4

        From Proto-Italic *-osjos, itself from Proto-Indo-European *-ósyo (genitive case suffix) secondarily marked with the genitive *-s.

        Suffix

        -ius

        1. the regular genitive singular suffix for most pronouns
          quī, cuius
          hic, huius
          ūnus, ūnī̆us
          alter, alterī̆us (alongside alterī, alterae)
        Usage notes

        Like 3d- and 4th-declension, and unlike 1st- and 2nd-declension forms, has one form for all genders. A gendered adjective option also exists for cuius.