exsuctus

Latin

Etymology

Perfect passive participle of exsugō (suck)[1].

Participle

exsuctus m (feminine exsucta, neuter exsuctum); first/second declension

  1. drawn out, extracted
  2. dried

Inflection

First/second declension.

Number Singular Plural
Case / Gender Masculine Feminine Neuter Masculine Feminine Neuter
Nominative exsuctus exsucta exsuctum exsuctī exsuctae exsucta
Genitive exsuctī exsuctae exsuctī exsuctōrum exsuctārum exsuctōrum
Dative exsuctō exsuctae exsuctō exsuctīs exsuctīs exsuctīs
Accusative exsuctum exsuctam exsuctum exsuctōs exsuctās exsucta
Ablative exsuctō exsuctā exsuctō exsuctīs exsuctīs exsuctīs
Vocative exsucte exsucta exsuctum exsuctī exsuctae exsucta

Descendants

  • Old Portuguese: enxoyto
  • Portuguese: enxuto
  • Sicilian: asciuttu, sciuttu, prisuttu, prusciuttu
  • Spanish: enjuto
  • Venetian: suto, sut, persuto

References

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