mephitis
See also: Mephitis
English
Etymology
From Latin mefītis, mephītis, from the name of a Samnite goddess who personified the poisonous gases emitted from swamps and volcanoes.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /məˈfaɪ.tɪs/
Noun
mephitis (countable and uncountable, plural mephitises)
- A poisonous or foul-smelling gas, especially as emitted from the earth; an unpleasant smell.
- 1822, Samuel Griswold Goodrich, Cabinet of curiosities: natural, artificial, and historical, page 140:
- The Abbe had, in the district of Latera, observed that in a mephitis of hydrogenous sulphurated or hepatic gas, a slow combustion of phosphorus took place, with the same resplendence as in the atmospheric air.
- 1868, John Loraine Abbott, The Home-book of Wonders, in Nature, Science and Art, page 135:
- He attempted several times to fire inflammable gas, with electric sparks, in the mephitic vapor, by means of the conductor of the electrophus; but, notwithstanding his utmost endeavors to animate the electricity, he could never obtain a single spark, the non-conductor becoming a conductor the moment it entered into the mephitis, on account of the humidity which adhered to its surface.
- 2008, Peter Cunningham, The Sea and the Silence, page 1:
- […] conveyancing of property to a background of ships loading or discharging and the clanging of wharf cranes, but in August, when the tide was low, the River Lyle's gum-like, perspiring mud banks released a mephitis […]
- (homeopathy) A dilution of fluids derived from skunks or polecats.
- 1854, C. Neidhard, “Mephitis Putorius and Other Remedies in Hooping Cough”, in The British Journal of Homoeopathy, page 436:
- Mephitis, in water, did not at first relieve the cough, so that I was compelled to prescribe another remedy; but after taking this for a short time, the father averred that he thought the first remedy, Mephitis, had a better effect than the last.
Derived terms
Latin
Alternative forms
- mefītis
Etymology
From Mephītis, the name of a Samnite goddess who personified or averted the poisonous gases emitted from swamps and volcanoes. The name is from Oscan 𐌌𐌄𐌚𐌉𐌞 (mefiú) and ultimately Proto-Italic *meðjos (“middle”), as in "one who is in the middle," the sense being that Mephitis encompasses earthly ideas between the subterranean and terrestrial worlds.[1]
Pronunciation
- (Classical) IPA(key): /meˈpʰiː.tis/, [mɛˈpʰiːt̪ɪs̠]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /meˈfi.tis/, [meˈfiːt̪is]
Noun
mephītis f (genitive mephītis); third declension
- mephitis (a poisonous or pestilential gas from the ground, e.g. from swamps or volcanoes)
Declension
Third-declension noun (i-stem, accusative singular in -im, ablative singular in -ī).
Case | Singular | Plural |
---|---|---|
Nominative | mephītis | mephītēs |
Genitive | mephītis | mephītium |
Dative | mephītī | mephītibus |
Accusative | mephītim | mephītēs mephītīs |
Ablative | mephītī | mephītibus |
Vocative | mephītis | mephītēs |
Derived terms
- mephīticus
References
- “mephitis”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- mephitis in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
- Battiloro, I. (2017). The Archaeology of Lucanian Cult Places: Fourth Century BC to the Early Imperial Age. United Kingdom: Taylor & Francis.
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