-monium

Latin

Etymology

From Proto-Indo-European *-monyom, from *-mō.

Note that, as in Ancient Greek δαιμόνιον (daimónion), the -o- should be short, but, as in Latin the declension of -mō (e.g. sermō) was contaminated by the nominative case and thus made -mōn- instead of -mon-, this derivation was apparently contaminated also.

Pronunciation

  • (Classical) IPA(key): /ˈmoː.ni.um/, [ˈmoː.ni.ũ]

Suffix

-mōnium n (genitive -mōniī); second declension

  1. Forms collective nouns and nouns designating legal status or obligation from other nouns.
    pater (father)patrimōnium (inheritance)
    māter (mother)mātrimōnium (marriage)
    testis (witness)testimōnium (evidence)

Usage notes

Declension

Second declension.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative -mōnium -mōnia
Genitive -mōniī -mōniōrum
Dative -mōniō -mōniīs
Accusative -mōnium -mōnia
Ablative -mōniō -mōniīs
Vocative -mōnium -mōnia

Derived terms

<a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:Latin_words_suffixed_with_-monium' title='Category:Latin words suffixed with -monium'>Latin words suffixed with -monium</a>
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