mos Teutonicus
See also: mos teutonicus
Latin
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editmos (“custom”) + Teutonicus (“Teuton, German”). Although other peoples (including the French) sometimes practised it, the custom was most closely associated with the Germans.
Pronunciation
edit- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): /moːs teu̯ˈto.ni.kus/, [moːs̠ t̪ɛu̯ˈt̪ɔnɪkʊs̠]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /mos teu̯ˈto.ni.kus/, [mɔs t̪eu̯ˈt̪ɔːnikus]
Noun
editmōs Teutonicus m sg (genitive mōris Teutonicī); third declension
- the medieval custom, common among Germans and some others who died in Muslim lands, of dismembering the body of a dead person, boiling the parts in water or wine to separate the flesh from the bones, and transporting the bones back to the person's homeland
- 1735 September, Johannes Christianus Faber, Dissertatio Inauguralis de Conscensione Tori Conjugalis, page 28:
- […] , domum ac lectum Caroli VIII? observat BAELIUS, omnes ad MOREM TEUTONICUM respicientes Annam Britannicam habuisse pro uxore Maximiliani, […]
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- 1777, Samuel Strykius, Usus moderni Pandectarum, continuatio tertia, libro XXIII usque ad XXXVIII, page 952:
- Et licet leges romanae circa testamenta sint recepta; tamen id fallit, ubi principium vel juris vel moris Teutonici repugnat.
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
Declension
editThird-declension noun with a second-declension adjective, singular only.
singular | |
---|---|
nominative | mōs Teutonicus |
genitive | mōris Teutonicī |
dative | mōrī Teutonicō |
accusative | mōrem Teutonicum |
ablative | mōre Teutonicō |
vocative | mōs Teutonice |