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ille

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also:Ille,'ille,and-ille

Galician

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Verb

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ille

  1. inflection ofillar:
    1. first/third-personsingularpresentsubjunctive
    2. third-personsingularimperative

Interlingua

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Etymology

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FromLatinille.

Adjective

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ille

  1. that

Synonyms

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Pronoun

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ille

  1. he

Irish

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Contraction

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ille

  1. Contraction ofileith

Further reading

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Latin

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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    FromOld Latinolle(he, that) (alsoollus,olla), fromProto-Italic*olnos, fromProto-Indo-European*h₂ol-no-s or*h₂l̥-no-s, from*h₂el-(beyond, other). Cognate with Latinuls(beyond),alius(other), andalter(the other);Umbrianulu(to that place),Old Church Slavonicлани(lani,last year, literallyin that (year)).

    Initiali- fromo- has no parallel case and owe to contamination fromis andiste, or the palatalizing effect ofl exilis.

    Pronunciation

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    Determiner

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    ille (feminineilla,neuterillud);demonstrative determiner (pronominal declension)

    1. that,yon;those
      • 29BCE – 19BCE,Virgil,Aeneid1.153:
        ille regit dictīs animōs et pectora mulcet
        that [man], by having spoken, guides [their] minds and soothes [their] hearts
      • 4th century,St Jerome,Vulgate,Tobit 3:24
        inillo tempore exauditae sunt preces amborum in conspectu gloriae summi Dei
        atthat time the prayers of them both were heard in the sight of the glory of the most high God

    Declension

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    Demonstrative determiner (pronominal declension).

    singularplural
    masculinefeminineneutermasculinefeminineneuter
    nominativeilleillailludillīillaeilla
    genitiveillī̆usillōrumillārumillōrum
    dativeillīillīs
    accusativeillumillamilludillōsillāsilla
    ablativeillōillāillōillīs
    vocative

    Derived terms

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    Descendants

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    References

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    • Sornicola, Rosanna. 2011. Per la storia dei dimostrativi romanzi: i tipi neutri [tso], [so], [ço], [tʃo] e la diacronia dei dimostrativi latini.Zeitschrift für romanische Philologie 127. 1–80. §2.1.2.

    Pronoun

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    ille (feminineilla,neuterillud);demonstrative pronoun (pronominal declension)

    1. thatone;that (thing);thoseones(in the plural);those (things);he,she,it
    2. (Late Latin)he,she,it(third-person personal pronoun)
      • Late 4th c.,Vulgate, Luke 22:38:
        Atille dixit eis: satis est.
        And He said unto them 'It is enough'.

    Declension

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    Demonstrative pronoun (pronominal declension).

    singularplural
    masculinefeminineneutermasculinefeminineneuter
    nominativeilleillailludillīillaeilla
    genitiveillī̆usillōrumillārumillōrum
    dativeillīillīs
    accusativeillumillamilludillōsillāsilla
    ablativeillōillāillōillīs
    vocative

    Descendants

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    Article

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    ille (definite)(Late Latin, EarlyMedieval Latin)

    1. the
      • p. 384CE,Egeria,Itinerarium Egeriae1.1:
        Intereā ambulantēs peruēnimus ad quendam locum ubi sē tamen montēsillī inter quōs ībāmus aperiēbant
        While we were walking, we arrived at a certain place, wherethe mountains, through which we went, nevertheless were open

    Descendants

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    Usage notes

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    • This demonstrative determiner/pronoun is used to refer to a person or thing, or persons or things, away from both speaker and listener. It contrasts withhic(this), which refers to people or things near the speaker, andiste(this/that), which refers to people or things near the listener.
    • As Latin had no person pronouns specifically meaning "he", "she" or "it", any ofille,iste,hic or (most frequently)is could assume that function. In Vulgar latin,ille weakened its meaning and frequently came to mean merely "the" (as a determiner) or "he/she/it" (as a pronoun). This is in fact the origin ofFrenchle(the) andil(he),Spanishel(the) andél(he), etc. The original meaning of a far demonstrative was maintained when augmented withecce oreccum, cf.Italianquello,Spanishaquel,Old Frenchcel.
    • In Classical usage,ille can have a secondary, appreciative function of casting the referent in a positive light:ille homō can mean "that (famous/renowned) man". The opposite, pejorative function is assumed byiste, andiste homō frequently means "that (no good) man". Such functions were not present in Vulgar Latin, andiste came to mean "this" (cf.Spanisheste,Portugueseeste).

    Derived terms

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    Related terms

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    Latin correlatives(edit)
    typedemonstrativerealisirrealisinterrogativeindefinitealternative
    proximalmedialdistalanaphoricidentityconditionalnegativeindefiniteirrelative / emphaticrelativeirrelativefree choiceuniversalnegative polarity
    basichiciste
    istic
    ille
    illic
    isipse
    īdem
    sīquisnēquisquam
    nēmō̆
    nihil
    nūllus
    numquisecquis
    ecquī
    ecquisnam
    ecquīnam
    quisnam
    quīnam
    quis
    quī
    quisquis
    quīcumque
    quīdam
    aliquis,quis
    aliquī,quī
    quispiam
    quīvis
    quīlibet
    quisquequisquam
    ūllus
    alius
    comparativehuiusmodī
    huiuscemodī
    istī̆usmodīillī̆usmodīeiusmodīeiusdemmodīsīcuiusmodīnēcuiusquammodīnumcuiusmodīcuiusnammodīcuiusmodīcuiusmodīcumquealicuiusmodī
    cuiusdammodī
    cuiusvīsmodīcuiusquemodīcuiusquammodīalterī̆usmodī
    dualneuteruternamuterutercumquealteruterutervīs
    uterlibet
    uterquealter
    placehīcistīcillīcibī̆ibī̆demsīcubīnusquam
    nūllibī
    ubinamubī̆ubī̆cumque
    ubiubī̆
    alicubī̆
    uspiam
    ubivīs
    ubilibet
    ubīqueusquamalibī
    aliās
    sourcehincºistim
    istinc
    ºillim
    illinc
    indeindidemsīcunde°nūllundeundenamºcum
    unde
    undecumque
    undeunde
    alicunde°undelibetundique°undiquamaliunde
    destinationhūc
    hōc
    °hōrsum
    istūc
    istōc
    °istōrsum
    illūc
    illōc
    °illōrsum
    eōdemsīquōnusquam
    °nūllōrsum
    numquōecquōquōnamquō
    quōrsum
    quōcumque
    quōquō
    °quōrsumcumque
    aliquō
    quōpiam
    °aliquōvorsum
    quōvīs
    quōlibet
    quōquequōquamaliō
    aliōrsum
    means,
    way,
    path,
    place
    hācistācillāceādemsīquānēquāquam
    haudquāquam
    numquāecquāquānamquāquācumque
    quāquā
    aliquāquāvīs
    quālibet
    quāque°quāquam
    ūllā
    aliā
    distancehāctenus°istātenus
    °istāctenus
    °illātenus
    °illāctenus
    eātenusnūllātenus°ecquātenus°quātenusnamquātenus°quātenuscumque
    °quāquātenus
    aliquātenus
    quādantenus
    °quātenusvīs
    °quātenuslibet
    ūllātenusaliātenus
    reason°hācpropter
    °hōccircā
    °istāpropter°illāproptereāpropter
    eōcircā
    °nullāpropter
    °nullōcircā
    cūr
    quāpropter
    quōcircā
    quārē
    °quādampropter°quōquecircā°aliāpropter
    mannerhōcmodōistōmodōillōmodōita
    sīc
    modō
    item
    itidem
    sīquīnihil
    nihilō
    neutiquam
    °neutī̆que
    nēquīquam
    nē quidem
    nūllōmodō
    numquīecquīutinamut
    prout
    quī
    quōmodō
    quōmodo
    quemadmodum
    quiter
    quārē
    utcumque
    utut
    proutcumque
    quōmodocumque
    °quemadmodumcumque
    quī
    quōdammodō
    aliquōmodō
    quōmodolibetutīque°utiquam
    °quīquam
    ūllōmodō
    aliter
    aliōquī
    alterō/aliōmodō
    timenum
    nunc
    ōlimtum
    tunc
    simulsīquandō̆numquam°numquandō̆ecquandō̆quandōnamquandō̆
    cum
    quandōcumque
    quandōque
    cumque
    °quandōnē
    °quandōquandō
    °cumcumque
    quondam
    aliquandō̆
    °quandōlibetquandōqueumquamaliās
    quantitytamtamen
    tandem
    quamquamcumque
    quamquam
    aliquamquamvīs
    quamlibet
    quamque
    sizetantustantusdemquantusquantuscumque
    quantusquantus
    aliquantusquantusvīs
    quantuslibet
    quantusque
    qualitytālis°ecquālisquālisnamquālisquāliscumque
    quālisquālis
    aliquālisquālislibetquālisque
    numbertottotidem°quotnam
    °quotinam
    quotquotquot
    quotcumque
    aliquotquotlibet
    order/fractionaltotusquotus°quotuscumque°aliquotus°quotuslibet°quotusque
    °quotusquisque
    repetitiontotiēnsnullotiēnsquotiēnsquotiēnscumquealiquotiēnsquotiēnslibetquotiēnsque
    °quotiēnsquisque
    multiplicationtotuplexquotuplex
    proportion°totuplusquotuplus
    † Turned conjunction with original meaning somewhat changed
    ° Rare
    ‡ Only used as a conjunction, not as an interrogative.

    See also

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    References

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    • ille”, inCharlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879),A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
    • ille”, inCharlton T. Lewis (1891),An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
    • ille”, inGaffiot, Félix (1934),Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
    • Carl Meißner; Henry William Auden (1894),Latin Phrase-Book[1], London:Macmillan and Co.
      • Pericles, the greatest man of his day:Pericles summus vir illius aetatis
      • a man of considerable learning for those times:vir ut temporibus illis doctus
      • hence these tears; there's the rub:hinc illae lacrimae (proverb.) (Ter. And. 1. 1. 99; Cael. 25. 61)
      • what will become of him:quid illo fiet?
      • I console myself with..:hoc (illo) solacio me consōlor
      • the memory of this will never fade from my mind:numquam ex animo meo memoria illius rei discedet
      • for a Roman he is decidedly well educated:sunt in illo, ut in homine Romano, multae litterae (De Sen. 4. 12)
      • those views are out of date:illae sententiae evanuerunt
      • those ideas have long ago been given up:illae sententiae iam pridem explosae et eiectae sunt (Fin. 5. 8. 23)
      • Solon, one of the seven sages:Solo, unus de septem (illis)
      • he possesses sound judgment in matters of taste:elegantia in illo est
      • there is a flavour of Atticism about his discourse:ex illius orationibus ipsae Athenae redolent
      • that Greek proverb contains an excellent lesson:bene illo Graecorum proverbio praecipitur
      • my relations with him are most hospitable:mihi cum illo hospitium est, intercedit
      • the aristocracy (as a party in politics):boni cives, optimi, optimates, also simplyboni (opp.improbi);illi, qui optimatium causam agunt
      • this much he said:haec (quidem) ille
      • this passage is obscure:hic (ille) locus obscurus est
      • (ambiguous) I console myself with..:haec (illa) res me consolatur
      • (ambiguous) Plato's ideal republic:illa civitas Platonis commenticia
      • (ambiguous) Plato's ideal republic:illa civitas, quam Plato finxit
    • Sihler, Andrew L. (1995),New Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin, Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press,→ISBN
    • De Vaan, Michiel (2008),Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill,→ISBN,page298

    Middle English

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    Alternative forms

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    Etymology

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    FromOld Norseillr, fromProto-Germanic*ilhilaz.

    Pronunciation

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    Adjective

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    ille (plural and weak singularille,comparativeworse,superlativeworst)

    1. evil;wicked

    Descendants

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    References

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    Norwegian Bokmål

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    Etymology 1

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    FromDanishilde. The formille introduced into Riksmål in 1907, but the formilde was still used at least until 1919 (e.g. by Kristian Elster).

    Adjective

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    ille (indeclinable,comparativeverre,indefinite superlativeverst,definite superlativeverste)

    1. bad

    Etymology 2

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    FromOld Norseilla.

    Pronunciation

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    • (Fredrikstad)IPA(key): [ˈɪ̂l̺.l̺ɛ̝]

    Adverb

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    ille

    1. badly
    2. (dialect, Fredrikstad)very
      ille bravery good
    Derived terms
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    References

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    Norwegian Nynorsk

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    Etymology 1

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    From theOld Norse adverbilla.

    Adverb

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    ille

    1. unlucky,miserably
    2. ill
    3. hurtful,condescending,enemy
    4. (dialectal, Fredrikstad)very
    Derived terms
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    Adjective

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    ille

    1. bad

    Etymology 2

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    From theOld Norse verbilla.

    Alternative forms

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    Verb

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    ille (present tenseillar,past tenseilla,past participleilla,passive infinitiveillast,present participleillande,imperativeille/ill)

    1. (transitive) toblame, think badly of
    2. (transitive) toanger

    Etymology 3

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    See the etymology of the correspondinglemma form.

    Adjective

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    ille

    1. definitesingular ofill
    2. plural ofill

    References

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    Sidamo

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    Ille.

    Etymology

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    FromProto-Cushitic*ʔil-. Cognates includeBurjiilla,Hadiyyaille,Kambaataille andOromoija.

    Pronunciation

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    • IPA(key): /ˈilːe/
    • Hyphenation:il‧le

    Noun

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    ille f (plural illuwa f)

    1. eye

    References

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    • Kazuhiro Kawachi (2007),A grammar of Sidaama (Sidamo), a Cushitic language of Ethiopia, page544

    Tatar

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    Etymology

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

    Numeral

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    ille (Cyrillic spellingилле)

    1. fifty
    Retrieved from "https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=ille&oldid=89474814"
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