batiola

Latin

Alternative forms

  • batiaca, batioca

Etymology

From Ancient Greek βατιάκη, βατιάκιον (batiákē, batiákion), from Middle Persian bʾtk' (bādag, wine, must), from Old Persian *bāta- (wine, must); from late Akkadian 𒁀𒂅𒌑 (baṭû, tray, platter; mixing container, bowl for liquids; wine jar, pitcher), from earlier Akkadian 𒁀𒋾𒌝 (baṭium, vessel, basin, place to hold; tray, platter) shifting semantically by the Neo-Babylonian period, but consistently an item listed with sets of vessels. Ultimately derived from Proto-Semitic *bvṭ- (a space or vessel; to be swollen, filled up, slow; to mix, agitate, or gurgle; to be hollow or emptied out, to lose or spread out contents). Cognates with Classical Syriac ܒܳܛܺܝܬܴܐ (bāṭīṯā), Persian باده (wine), Persian باطیه‎‎ (bâtiye), and Arabic بَاطِيَة (bāṭiya).

Pronunciation

  • (Classical) IPA(key): /baˈti.o.la/, [baˈti.ɔ.ɫa]

Noun

batiola f (genitive batiolae); first declension

  1. A kind of goblet

Inflection

First declension.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative batiola batiolae
Genitive batiolae batiolārum
Dative batiolae batiolīs
Accusative batiolam batiolās
Ablative batiolā batiolīs
Vocative batiola batiolae

References

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