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homo

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also:HOMO,Homo,andhomo-
Languages (21)
English
Bongo • Chickasaw • Chinese • Czech • Dutch • Esperanto • Finnish • Franco-Provençal • French • Ido • Indonesian • Italian • Latin • Norwegian Bokmål • Norwegian Nynorsk • Portuguese • Romanian • Spanish • Swedish • West Frisian
Page categories

English

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EnglishWikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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Clipping ofhomosexual.

Noun

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homo (pluralhomos)

  1. (colloquial, often derogatory)Clipping ofhomosexual.
    I heard that he's ahomo, but he hasn't come out of the closet yet.
    • 1938, Cecil Day Lewis,Starting point[1], page127:
      "... He's ahomo."
      "My dear Theo, at my age one can't worry about little details like that. Besides, he's got such a nice voice."
Translations
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short form ofhomosexual

Adjective

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homo (comparativemorehomo,superlativemosthomo)

  1. (colloquial, sometimes derogatory) Of or pertaining tohomosexuality.
Derived terms
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Etymology 2

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Clipping ofhomogenized.

Noun

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homo (countable anduncountable,pluralhomos)

  1. (dated, US, Canada)Homogenized milk with a highbutterfat content.
    • 1956, Purdue University. Agricultural Experiment Station.,Station bulletin[2], page25:
      One quart ofhomo wholesale in glass equals one quart equivalent. Certain modifications were made in these relatives to adjust for variations in units per ...
Related terms
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Translations
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homogenized milk with butterfat

Adjective

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homo (notcomparable)

  1. (Canada, US)Homogenized; almost always said ofmilk with a highbutterfat content.
    • 1958,American milk review and milk plant monthly[3], volume20, page190:
      Regularhomo milk was being sold out of stores in half gallons for 33 cents against 44 cents on regularhomo milk on home delivery.

Etymology 3

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FromLatinhomō(man, human), sometimes as a shortening ofHomo sapiens.(Canthis(+) etymology besourced?)Doublet ofgome,hombre,ombre, andomi.

Noun

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homo (pluralhomos)

  1. (nonstandard) Ahuman.
    • 1850, Edgar Allan Poe,X-ing a Paragrab:
      John, John, if you don't go you're nohomo—no! You're only a fowl, an owl, a cow, a sow,—a doll, a poll; a poor, old, good-for-nothing-to-nobody, log, dog, hog, or frog, come out of a Concord bog.
Related terms
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References

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  • John Camden Hotten (1873),The Slang Dictionary

Anagrams

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Bongo

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Pronunciation

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Noun

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homo

  1. nose

References

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  • Moi, Daniel Rabbi and Mario Lau Babur Kuduku, Sister Mary Mangira Michael, Simon Hagimir John, Rapheal Zakenia Paul Mafoi, Nyoul Gulluma Kuduku. 2018. Bongo – English Dictionary. Juba, South Sudan. SIL-South Sudan.

Chickasaw

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Etymology

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From the same root asholmo(v1.), which is related toChoctawholmo(roof).

Pronunciation

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Verb

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homo

  1. (active voice, transitive, nominal object) toroof, to put a roof on

Inflection

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Class I Verb Subjects (Active)
Verbs beginning with a consonant.SingularPluralInclusive Tri-Plural
1st-person(I, we)homoli
homo-li
iihomo / iliihomo / liihomo
ii-homo / ilii-homo / lii-homo
iloohomo
iloo-homo
2nd-person(you, you all)ishhomo
ish-homo
hashhomo
hash-homo
3rd-person(he, she, it, they)homo(hoo)homo
(hoo-)homo

Derived terms

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Chinese

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Etymology

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Borrowed fromJapaneseホモ(homo), itself a shortening ofホモセクシャル(homosekusharu,homosexual), fromEnglishhomosexual.

Pronunciation

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Adjective

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homo(Internetslang, humorous)

  1. gay
    Synonym:木毛(mùmáo)

Noun

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homo(Internetslang, humorous)

  1. malehomosexuality
  2. agay, especially amalehomosexual

Synonyms

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Proper noun

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homo(Mainland China, Internetslang, humorous)

  1. alternative form of鴻蒙 /鸿蒙(hóngméng,HarmonyOS, Huawei's operating system)

See also

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Czech

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Etymology

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Borrowed fromLatinhomō.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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homo n (indeclinable)

  1. genusHomo, especially in informal and creative use
    Synonym:člověk
    • 1985,Listy:
      Tak sebou hni, ty moje malý homo sapiens! [...] můj malý homo!
      (pleaseadd an English translation of this quotation)
    • 2008, Jekaterina Andrikanis,Homevideo I. - aneb Sám sobě režisérem:
      Zapnutím kamery vstoupil „homo natáčející“ do dialogu s „homo prohlížejícím“.
      (pleaseadd an English translation of this quotation)

Usage notes

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  • Specialists usually use the capitalized translingual spellingHomo.

Related terms

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Further reading

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Dutch

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Clipping ofhomoseksueel and/orhomofiel.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈɦoː.moː/
  • Audio:(file)
  • Hyphenation:ho‧mo

Noun

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homo m (pluralhomo's,diminutivehomootje n)

  1. (neutral, not offensive)gay,homosexual
  2. (offensive, derogatory)Used as a general slur

Usage notes

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The wordhomo is a general, neutral and somewhat informal term for a homosexual person. It is used as a slur by some, but the term, or its use in this way, can be considered offensive. Because the word itself is not inherently offensive or vulgar, some people may take offense at the implication that homosexuality is something negative and shameful that could be used as a derogatory term. This depends, of course, on a particular person's attitude towards homosexuality. Compare similar usage of Englishgay.

Derived terms

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Esperanto

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Etymology

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Etymology tree
Proto-Indo-European*dʰeǵʰ-
Proto-Indo-European*-ōm
Proto-Indo-European*dʰéǵʰōm
Proto-Indo-European*-ō
Proto-Indo-European*ǵʰmṓ
Proto-Italic*hemō
Latinhemō
Esperantohomo

    FromLatinhomō. CompareFrenchhomme,Italianuomo.Doublet ofoni.

    Pronunciation

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    Noun

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    homo (accusative singularhomon,pluralhomoj,accusative pluralhomojn)

    1. ahuman being,person
      • 1933, La Sankta Biblio, (Evangelio laŭ Luko 4:4):
        Kaj Jesuo respondis al li: Estas skribite, Ne per la pano sole vivoshomo.
        Then Jesus answered him, "It is written, "Man shall not live by bread alone." (Luke 4:4)

    Hypernyms

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    Hyponyms

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    Holonyms

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    Derived terms

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    Descendants

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    See also

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    homo

    Finnish

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    Etymology

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    Clipping ofhomoseksuaali.

    Pronunciation

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    • IPA(key): /ˈhomo/,[ˈho̞mo̞]
    • Rhymes:-omo
    • Syllabification(key):ho‧mo
    • Hyphenation(key):ho‧mo

    Noun

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    homo

    1. gay man
      Synonyms:seeThesaurus:homo
    2. (rare) anygay person
    3. (offensive, derogatory)Used as a general slur.

    Usage notes

    [edit]

    The wordhomo is a general, neutral and somewhat informal term for a homosexual person. It is used as a slur by some, but either the term, or its use in this way, can be considered offensive. Because the word itself is not inherently offensive or vulgar, some people may take offense at the implication that homosexuality is something negative and shameful that could be used as a derogatory term. This depends, of course, on a particular person's attitude towards homosexuality. Compare similar usage in Dutch.

    Declension

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    Inflection ofhomo (Kotus type 1/valo, no gradation)
    nominativehomohomot
    genitivehomonhomojen
    partitivehomoahomoja
    illativehomoonhomoihin
    singularplural
    nominativehomohomot
    accusativenom.homohomot
    gen.homon
    genitivehomonhomojen
    partitivehomoahomoja
    inessivehomossahomoissa
    elativehomostahomoista
    illativehomoonhomoihin
    adessivehomollahomoilla
    ablativehomoltahomoilta
    allativehomollehomoille
    essivehomonahomoina
    translativehomoksihomoiksi
    abessivehomottahomoitta
    instructivehomoin
    comitativeSee the possessive forms below.
    Possessive forms ofhomo(Kotus type 1/valo, no gradation)
    first-person singular possessor
    singularplural
    nominativehomonihomoni
    accusativenom.homonihomoni
    gen.homoni
    genitivehomonihomojeni
    partitivehomoanihomojani
    inessivehomossanihomoissani
    elativehomostanihomoistani
    illativehomoonihomoihini
    adessivehomollanihomoillani
    ablativehomoltanihomoiltani
    allativehomollenihomoilleni
    essivehomonanihomoinani
    translativehomoksenihomoikseni
    abessivehomottanihomoittani
    instructive
    comitativehomoineni
    second-person singular possessor
    singularplural
    nominativehomosihomosi
    accusativenom.homosihomosi
    gen.homosi
    genitivehomosihomojesi
    partitivehomoasihomojasi
    inessivehomossasihomoissasi
    elativehomostasihomoistasi
    illativehomoosihomoihisi
    adessivehomollasihomoillasi
    ablativehomoltasihomoiltasi
    allativehomollesihomoillesi
    essivehomonasihomoinasi
    translativehomoksesihomoiksesi
    abessivehomottasihomoittasi
    instructive
    comitativehomoinesi
    first-person plural possessor
    singularplural
    nominativehomommehomomme
    accusativenom.homommehomomme
    gen.homomme
    genitivehomommehomojemme
    partitivehomoammehomojamme
    inessivehomossammehomoissamme
    elativehomostammehomoistamme
    illativehomoommehomoihimme
    adessivehomollammehomoillamme
    ablativehomoltammehomoiltamme
    allativehomollemmehomoillemme
    essivehomonammehomoinamme
    translativehomoksemmehomoiksemme
    abessivehomottammehomoittamme
    instructive
    comitativehomoinemme
    second-person plural possessor
    singularplural
    nominativehomonnehomonne
    accusativenom.homonnehomonne
    gen.homonne
    genitivehomonnehomojenne
    partitivehomoannehomojanne
    inessivehomossannehomoissanne
    elativehomostannehomoistanne
    illativehomoonnehomoihinne
    adessivehomollannehomoillanne
    ablativehomoltannehomoiltanne
    allativehomollennehomoillenne
    essivehomonannehomoinanne
    translativehomoksennehomoiksenne
    abessivehomottannehomoittanne
    instructive
    comitativehomoinenne

    Derived terms

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    compounds

    Related terms

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    See also

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    Further reading

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    Franco-Provençal

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    Franco-ProvençalWikipedia has an article on:
    Wikipediafrp

    Etymology

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    Inherited fromLatinhomō.

    Noun

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    homo m (pluralhomos)(ORB, broad)

    1. man
      Coordinate term:fèna(woman)

    Derived terms

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    References

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    • homme in DicoFranPro:Dictionnaire Français/Francoprovençal – ondicofranpro.llm.umontreal.ca
    • homo in Lo trèsor Arpitan – onarpitan.eu

    French

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    Etymology

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    Clipping ofhomosexuel.

    Pronunciation

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    Noun

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    homo m orfby sense (pluralhomos)

    1. gay (homosexual person, especially male)

    Adjective

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    homo (pluralhomos)

    1. gay,homo

    Further reading

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    Ido

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    Etymology

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    FromEsperantohomo, fromEnglishhuman,Frenchhomme andhumain,Italianuomo,Spanishhombre, fromLatinhomō, fromProto-Indo-European*dʰǵʰm̥mō(earthling).

    Pronunciation

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    Noun

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    homo (pluralhomi)

    1. human,man

    Antonyms

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    Derived terms

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    Indonesian

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    Etymology

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    FromEnglishhomo.

    Pronunciation

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    • IPA(key): /ho.mo/
    • Hyphenation:ho‧mo

    Noun

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    homo (pluralhomo-homo)

    1. (colloquial, offensive)gay;homosexual

    Synonyms

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    Italian

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    Noun

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    homo m (pluralhomini)

    1. obsolete spelling ofomo(man,person)

    Latin

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    DuohominēsTwopeople

    Etymology

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      From earlierhemō, fromProto-Italic*hemō, fromProto-Indo-European*ǵʰm̥mṓ(earthling), from*dʰéǵʰōm(earth), whenceLatinhumus. Cognates includeOld Lithuanianžmuõ(man),Gothic𐌲𐌿𐌼𐌰(guma) andOld Englishguma(man) (whenceEnglishgome). See alsonēmō(no one), from*ne hemō.

      Pronunciation

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      Noun

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      homō̆ m (genitivehominis);third declension

      1. ahuman being,man,human,person
        Homō hominī lupus est (proverb).
        Man is a wolf toman.
        Hominēs, dum docent, discunt.
        People, while teaching, learn. [I.e., the teacher is also a student.]
        • 163BCE,Publius Terentius Afer,Heauton Timorumenos [The Self-Tormentor]:
          Homo sum — humani nihil a me alienum puto.
          I'm ahuman being — nothing that's human is alien to me.
        • 67 or 49 BC, Fragmentum Atestinum:[5]
          qvod·ad·hominem·libervm·liberamve·pertinere·deicatvr
          What belongs to a freeman?
        • 66BCE,Cicero,Pro Cluentio199:
          At quae mater! [] cuius ea stultitia est, ut eam nemohominem appellare possit!
          And what a mother! [] whose stupidity is such that nobody would even call herhuman!
        • ?, Pseudo-Remmius Palaemon,Ars 536.9:
          [] exceptis paucis masculini generis, quorum numero suntordo, ligo, et iis quae commūnis generis sunt, uthomo, nemo, bubo etmango.
          [] except [] and those that are of common gender, such ashomo, nemo, bubo andmango.
      2. amale human being,man
        • c. 194BCE,Plautus,Poenulus3.1.1–4:
          [Agorastocles] Ita me di ament, tardo amico nihil est quicquam inaequius,
          praesertimhomini amanti, qui quidquid agit properat omnia.
          Sicut ego hos duco advocatos, homines spissigradissimos,
          tardiores quam corbitae sunt in tranquillo mari.
          [Agorastocles] May gods so love me, nothing is more unfair than having a slothful friend, even more so to aman in love, who in doing anything must all expedite. So I lead them, having called them forth, the most slow-paced men of them all, slower than freight ships [corbitae] upon a quiet sea.
        • 533CE,Justinian,Digest48.19.38.5.3:
          Quī abortionis aut amatoris poculum dant [] si eo mulier authomo perierit []
          Those who poison someone with an abortion or love potion [] if it causes the death of the woman orman []
      3. (address)man,fellow,mate,pal,bud,partner,dude(a form of address to male peers, especially by another male)
        • 160BCE,Publius Terentius Afer,Adelphoe111, (Robert Kauer and W. M. Lindsay (eds), 1958):
          prō Iuppiter, tŭhomō adigi' mĕ ad īnsāniam!
          For Jupiter's sake,man, you're driving me insane!
      4. (address)used in the vocative expression "mihomo" as a form of address to a man by a woman
      5. (Medieval Latin)husband

      Usage notes

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      • Homo has the basic sense of "human being"[1] and is often used generically to mean “Man” or “men” in the broad sense of "humanity", encompassing both male and female human beings. It is not typically used to specify or emphasize male as opposed to female sex: the usual terms to express “man” in the sense “male” arevir(adult male human being) ormās(male). There are rare examples in early Latin ofhomō being used in contrast to an explicitly female term such asmulier(woman), such as PlautusCistellaria 723, but this only becomes frequent in late Latin.[2]
      • When referring to specific human beings,homō is more often applied to male rather than female persons in the corpus of ancient Latin texts. For Romans, the use ofhomō versusvir when referring to a male human being was influenced by the differing social connotations of the two words:vir tends to be reserved as a positive designation for men of the Roman upper class, whereas the more generic termhomō is frequently used to refer to men of lower social orders or foreigners,[3] and also to refer to upper class men in contexts where the positive connotations ofvir would be out of place. For example,homō rather thanvir tends to be used by Cicero in connection with pejorative adjectives.[4] There seems to have been a similar distinction in social connotation betweenmulier(woman), the general word for 'woman' that could be used in neutral or negative contexts, andfēmina(female, woman), which had positive, aristocratic overtones when used as a designation for a woman.[5]
        • An instance of Cicero speaking of good and bad men using the nounsvir andhomo respectively (Pro Caelio 12):
          utebaturhominibus improbis multis; et quidemoptimis seviris deditum esse simulabat.
          He made use of manywicked people; and indeed he pretended to be devoted tomost excellent men.
      • Homo is claimed to be of common (epicene) gender by several grammarians, albeit with limited external supporting evidence - see quotations. When used with a modifier and referring to a woman, nevertheless agrees in the masculine gender (like GermanMensch, Russianчелове́к(čelovék)) (Charisius, GL I, p.102.20–103.1 = pp.130.19–31.2 B.).
      • The alternative genitive singular formhominus is attested in Old Latin, with the rare genitive singular ending-us instead of the standard Classical Latin ending-is.

      Declension

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      Third-declension noun.

      singularplural
      nominativehomō̆hominēs
      genitivehominishominum
      dativehominīhominibus
      accusativehominemhominēs
      ablativehominehominibus
      vocativehomō̆hominēs

      Hyponyms

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      Derived terms

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      Descendants

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      Descendants

      References

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      1. ^Santoro L'Hoir, Francesca (1992)The Rhetoric of Gender Terms: 'man', 'woman', and the Portrayal of Character in Latin Prose, page 159
      2. ^Adams, J. N. (1972), “Latin Words for 'Woman' and 'Wife'”, inGlotta, volume50, number3./4., page247
      3. ^Santoro L'Hoir (1992), page 2
      4. ^Santoro L'Hoir (1992), page 10
      5. ^Santoro L'Hoir (1992), pages 32-33

      Further reading

      [edit]
      • homo”, inCharlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879),A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
      • homo”, inCharlton T. Lewis (1891),An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
      • "homo", in Charles du Fresne du Cange,Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition with additions by D. P. Carpenterius, Adelungius and others, edited by Léopold Favre, 1883–1887)
      • Carl Meißner; Henry William Auden (1894),Latin Phrase-Book[6], London:Macmillan and Co.
        • our contemporaries; men of our time:homines qui nunc sunt (opp.qui tunc fuerunt)
        • our contemporaries; men of our time:homines huius aetatis, nostrae memoriae
        • that is the way of the world; such is life:sic vita hominum est
        • the position of the lower classes:condicio ac fortuna hominum infimi generis
        • what am I to do with this fellow:quid huic homini (alsohoc homine)faciam?
        • Fortune makes men shortsighted, infatuates them:fortuna caecos homines efficit, animos occaecat
        • my most intimate acquaintance:homo intimus, familiarissimus mihi
        • to be in every one's mouth:in ore omnium oromnibus (hominum orhominibus, but onlymihi, tibi, etc.)esse
        • to be a subject for gossip:in sermonem hominum venire
        • the common opinion, the general idea:existimatiohominum, omnium
        • a devotee of pleasure; a self-indulgent man:homo voluptarius (Tusc. 2. 7. 18)
        • many men, many minds:quot homines, tot sententiae
        • within the memory of man:post hominum memoriam
        • within the memory of man:post homines natos
        • learned, scientific, literary men:homines litterarum studiosi
        • learned, scientific, literary men:homines docti
        • a man of learning; a scholar; a savant:vir orhomo doctus, litteratus
        • for a Roman he is decidedly well educated:sunt in illo, ut in homine Romano, multae litterae (De Sen. 4. 12)
        • to civilise men, a nation:homines, gentem a fera agrestique vita ad humanum cultum civilemque deducere (De Or. 1. 8. 33)
        • an accomplished dialectician:homo in dialecticis versatissimus
        • moral science; ethics:philosophia, in qua de bonis rebus et malis, deque hominum vita et moribus disputatur
        • a conscientious historian:homo in historia diligens
        • a singer, member of a choir:(homo) symphoniacus
        • a wit; a joker:(homo) ridiculus (Plaut. Stich. 1. 3. 21)
        • a man of no self-control, self-indulgent:homo impotens sui
        • a man of no self-control, self-indulgent:homo effrenatus, intemperans
        • a moral (immoral) man:homo bene (male) moratus
        • a depraved, abandoned character:homo perditus
        • a man of character, with a strong personality:vir constans, gravis (opp.homo inconstans, levis)
        • to sacrifice human victims:pro victimis homines immolare
        • to unite isolated individuals into a society:dissipatos homines in (ad) societatem vitae convocare (Tusc. 1. 25. 62)
        • to shun society:hominum coetus, congressus fugere
        • business-men:homines negotii (always in sing.)gerentes
        • an experienced politician:homo in re publica exercitatus
        • a parvenu (a man no member of whose family has held curule office):homo novus
        • people of every rank:homines omnis generis
        • people of every rank and age:homines omnium ordinum et aetatum
        • one of the people:homo plebeius, de plebe
        • a popular man:aurae popularis homo (Liv. 42. 30)
        • public opinion:existimatio populi, hominum
        • to be always considering what people think:multum communi hominum opinioni tribuere
        • men of sound opinions:homines graves (opp.leves)
        • a democrat:homo popularis
        • a man who genuinely wishes the people's good:homo vere popularis (Catil. 4. 5. 9)
        • a democratic leader:homo florens in populari ratione
        • revolutionists:homines seditiosi, turbulenti ornovarum rerum cupidi

      Norwegian Bokmål

      [edit]

      Etymology

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      Short forhomofil(homophile) orhomofil person(homophile person).

      Adjective

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      homo (indeclinable)

      1. homosexual,gay

      Noun

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      homo m (definite singularhomoen,indefinite pluralhomoer,definite pluralhomoene)

      1. ahomosexual orgay(male homosexual person).

      Synonyms

      [edit]

      Derived terms

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      Related terms

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      References

      [edit]
      • “homo” inThe Bokmål Dictionary.
      • homo” inThe Ordnett Dictionary

      Norwegian Nynorsk

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      Short forhomofil(homophile) orhomofil person(homophile person).

      Adjective

      [edit]

      homo (indeclinable)

      1. homosexual,gay

      Noun

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      homo m (definite singularhomoen,indefinite pluralhomoar,definite pluralhomoane)

      1. ahomosexual orgay(male homosexual person).

      Synonyms

      [edit]

      Derived terms

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      Related terms

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      References

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      Portuguese

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]
       

      • Hyphenation:ho‧mo

      Adjective

      [edit]

      homo (invariable)

      1. (derogatory)homosexual(involving or relating to homosexuals)
        Synonyms:homossexual,gay

      Further reading

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      Romanian

      [edit]

      Etymology

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      Clipping ofhomosexual.

      Noun

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      homo m (pluralhomo)

      1. (slang)gay

      Declension

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      singularplural
      indefinitedefiniteindefinitedefinite
      nominative-accusativehomohomoulhomohomoi
      genitive-dativehomohomouluihomohomolor
      vocativehomoulehomolor

      Spanish

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      Adjective

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      homo (invariable)

      1. homo(homosexual)

      Further reading

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      Swedish

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      Noun

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      homo c orn

      1. (colloquial, chiefly derogatory) ahomo (homosexual)
        Synonym:bög

      Adjective

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      homo

      1. (colloquial, only used predicatively)homosexual
        Synonym:homosexuell

      See also

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      References

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      West Frisian

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      Etymology

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      (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium.)

      Noun

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      homo c (pluralhomo's)

      1. homosexual,gayperson

      Derived terms

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      Further reading

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      • homo”, inWurdboek fan de Fryske taal (in Dutch),2011
      Retrieved from "https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=homo&oldid=89564830"
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