macaronic
English
WOTD – 23 May 2010
Alternative forms
- maccaronic
- macaronick (obsolete)
Etymology
From New Latin, 1517 coinage, macaronicus, from Italian (Neapolitan dialect) maccarone (“coarse dumpling”).
Pronunciation
Adjective
macaronic (comparative more macaronic, superlative most macaronic)
- (archaic) Jumbled, mixed.
- (literature) Written in a hodgepodge mixture of two or more languages.
- (dated) Like a macaroni or dandy; foppish, trifling, affected.
- Synonyms: buckish, dandyish; see also Thesaurus:foppish
Derived terms
Translations
written in a mixture of languages
|
Noun
macaronic (plural macaronics)
- (literature) A work of macaronic character.
- (linguistic morphology) A word consisting of a mix of words of two or more languages.
- Synonyms: hybrid, etymological hybrid
- Such a word that mixes Latin morphemes with non-Latin ones.
Translations
macaronic work
|
word which is mix of Latin and non-Latin
Anagrams
Romanian
Etymology
Borrowed from French macaronique. By surface analysis, macaroană + -ic.
Adjective
macaronic m or n (feminine singular macaronică, masculine plural macaronici, feminine and neuter plural macaronice)
Declension
| singular | plural | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| masculine | neuter | feminine | masculine | neuter | feminine | |||
| nominative- accusative |
indefinite | macaronic | macaronică | macaronici | macaronice | |||
| definite | macaronicul | macaronica | macaronicii | macaronicele | ||||
| genitive- dative |
indefinite | macaronic | macaronice | macaronici | macaronice | |||
| definite | macaronicului | macaronicei | macaronicilor | macaronicelor | ||||