aciale
Latin
Alternative forms
- acuāle (in glosses)
Etymology
Noun
aciāle n (genitive aciālis); third declension
- (Northern Italy, Late Latin) steel[1]
Declension
Third-declension noun (neuter, pure i-stem).
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | aciāle | aciālia |
| genitive | aciālis | aciālium |
| dative | aciālī | aciālibus |
| accusative | aciāle | aciālia |
| ablative | aciālī | aciālibus |
| vocative | aciāle | aciālia |
Descendants
- North Italian:
- Emilian: asàl (Parmigiano, Reggiano)
- Friulian: açâl
- Ladin: acià
- Fassano: aciàl, acèl
- Gardenese: acèl
- Moenese: aciàl
- Old Ligurian: azale
- Ligurian: asà
- Monegasque: açaru
- Ligurian: asà
- Old Lombard: azale, azal
- Piedmontese: assel
- Monferrino: assèe
- Romansch: atschal, atschel, itschal
- Old Venetan: açal, açale, açallo, azalle, azalo, azzal
- → Old Italian: acciale, accialo
- Gallo-Romance:
- Old Franco-Provençal: aciel
- Franco-Provençal: aciel (Aosta)
- Old Franco-Provençal: aciel
- → Proto-West Germanic: *akkjal (see there for further descendants)
- → Proto-Slavic: *ocelь, *ocělь[2]
References
- ^ Pfister, Max, Schweickard, Wolfgang (1979-) “aciale”, in Lessico etimologico italiano[1], volume I: Ab—alburnus, Mainz: Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Literatur, pages 204-208, columns 408-416.
- ^ Vít Boček (2010) Studie k nejstarším romanismům ve slovanských jazycích (Studia etymologica Brunensia; 9), Praha: Nakladatelství Lidové noviny, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 37.