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patientia is a Latin Noun that primarily means suffering.
Noun
suffering, patience, endurance
English derivatives:
patient impatient
Noun
(w. gen.) Ability or willingness to endure,endurance (of).
Ability or willingness to endure hardship, pain, etc., endurances, hardiness. (b) conditions of hardship or suffering. (c) patience in the pursuance of a policy, etc., persistence.
Forbearance, tolerance, patience; complaisance, submissiveness. (b) submission to sexual intercourse (by prostitutes or catamites). (c) apathy, passivity. (d) (leg.) sufferance, tacit consent or permission.
Quō usque tandem abūtēre, Catilīna, patientiā nostrā? (Cicero, In Catilinam I.I)Compare For how long will you abuse our patience, Catiline?
Marcet sine adversario virtus; tunc apparet quanta sit quantumque polleat, cum qui possit patientia ostendit. [De Providentia, II, 4]Compare Without an adversary prowess shrivels. We see how great and efficient it really is only when it shows by endurance what it is capable of. [Tr. J. W. Basore]
Sed tamen hic singularis patientia miles fero.Compare But yet the soldiers were bearing these things with extraordinary patience.
Singular | Plural | |
Nom. | patientia | patientiae |
Gen. | patientiae | patientiārum |
Dat. | patientiae | patientiīs |
Acc. | patientiam | patientiās |
Abl. | patientiā | patientiīs |
Allen, Joseph H. Allen and Greenough's New Latin Grammar for Schools and Colleges: Founded on Comparative Grammar. Edited by James B. Greenough, George L. Kittredge, Albert A. Howard, and Benjamin L. D'Ooge. Boston, MA: Ginn & Company, 1903.
Crystal, David. A Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics. 6th ed. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing, 2008.
Delatte, Louis, Suzanne Govaerts, Joseph Denooz, and Etienne Evrard. Dictionnaire fréquentiel et index inverse de la langue latine [Frequency Dictionary and Inverse Index of the Latin Language]. Liège, Belgium: Laboratoire d'analyse statistique des langues anciennes de l'Université de Liège (L.A.S.L.A.), 1981.
Diederich, Paul B. The Frequency of Latin Words and Their Endings. PhD diss., Columbia University, 1939.
Francese, Christopher. "Latin Core Vocabulary." Dickinson College Commentaries. Last modified 2014. http://dcc.dickinson.edu/latin-vocabulary-list.
Gildersleeve, Basil L., and Gonzales Lodge. Gildersleeve's Latin Grammar: Third Edition, Revised, and Enlarged. 3rd ed. London, England: Macmillan and Co., 1903.
Glare, Peter G.W. Oxford Latin Dictionary. Vols. 1-8. Oxford, England: Clarendon Press, 1982.
Krüger, Bernd. "Latin Conjugation Tables." Cactus2000. Accessed May 5, 2023. https://latin.cactus2000.de/index.en.php.
Pierson, Nick. "Sound of Text." Accessed October 26, 2019. https://soundoftext.com.
Wheelock, Frederick M. Wheelock's Latin. 6th ed. Revised by Richard A. LaFleur. New York, NY: HarperCollins Publishers, 2005.
Wiktionary Contributors. "Victionarium." Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. Updated March 18, 2019. https://la.wiktionary.org/wiki/Victionarium:Pagina_prima.
Chicago (17th ed.)
Allo Contributors. "patientia, patientiae (n.) - Latin Word Definition." Allo Latin Dictionary. Last modified . Accessed October 7, 2024. http://ancientlanguages.org/latin/dictionary/patientia-patientiae.
Entry created on . Last updated on .