animositas

Latin

Etymology

From animōsus (spirited ,courageous/full of courage, bold, undaunted, proud) + -tās.

Noun

animōsitās f (genitive animōsitātis); third declension

  1. Derived from animus: courageousness/courage, bravery, boldness, undauntedness
  2. Derived from animus: arrogance, haughtiness, pridefulness
  3. Derived from animus: aggressiveness, ardor, fervor, passion, vehemence
  4. Derived from animus: enmity, fury/furiosity/furiousness, wrath/wrathfulness
  5. Derived from animus: adamancy, headstrongness, wilfulness
  6. Derived from anima: spiritedness/spirit, enthusiasm
  7. (Medieval Latin) Certain particular strong emotions: animosity, enmity, hostility, opposition

Declension

Third-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative animōsitās animōsitātēs
Genitive animōsitātis animōsitātum
Dative animōsitātī animōsitātibus
Accusative animōsitātem animōsitātēs
Ablative animōsitāte animōsitātibus
Vocative animōsitās animōsitātēs

Descendants

References

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.