Ausonian

English

Etymology

From Latin Ausonia (Lower Italy), extended poetically to “Italy”, from Ancient Greek Αὐσονία (Ausonía), from Αὔσων (Aúsōn), a son of Ulysses, who is said to have settled there.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɔːˈsəʊni.ən/

Adjective

Ausonian (not comparable)

  1. (historical) Of ancient Ausonia or the Ausonians.
    • 1834, [Edward Bulwer-Lytton], chapter IX, in The Last Days of Pompeii. [], volume III, London: Richard Bentley, []; successor to Henry Colburn, →OCLC:
      Sometimes they marked the form of the silk-haired and graceful capella, with its wreathing horn and bright grey eye—which, still beneath Ausonian skies, recalls the eclogues of Maro, browsing half-way up the hills; and the grapes, already purple with the smiles of the deepening summer, glowed out from the arched festoons, which hung pendent from tree to tree.
    • 1887, Theodor Mommsen, William Purdie Dickson, The Provinces of the Roman Empire from Caesar to Diocletian, page 172:
      master of the glorious art of proud Ausonian song
  2. (poetic) Italian.
  3. Of or relating to the ancient poet Ausonius.

Noun

Ausonian (plural Ausonians)

  1. (historical) An ancient inhabitant of middle or lower Italy.
    • 1823, “Chronology”, in Encyclopaedia Britannica:
      The Ausonians, the most ancient inhabitants of Italy, computed the day from midnight.
  2. (poetic) An Italian.

References