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See also: Stiria

English

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Etymology

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From Latin stīria (icicle).

Noun

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stiria (plural stiriae)

  1. An icicle-shaped concretion.
    • 1665, Robert Hooke, Micrographia, section I:
      the Microscope can afford us hundreds of Instances of Points many thousand times sharper: such as […] the ends of the stiriæ or small parallelipipeds of Amianthus […].

Anagrams

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Latin

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Etymology

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From Proto-Indo-European *ster- (stiff). Cognate with Latin stultus, stolidus, sterilis, strēnuus. See also Old English steorfan (to die), Latin torpeō, Lithuanian tirpstu (to become rigid), Old Church Slavonic трупети (trupeti).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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stīria f (genitive stīriae); first declension

  1. icicle, ice drop

Declension

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First-declension noun.

singular plural
nominative stīria stīriae
genitive stīriae stīriārum
dative stīriae stīriīs
accusative stīriam stīriās
ablative stīriā stīriīs
vocative stīria stīriae

Derived terms

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Descendants

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  • English: stiria
  • Sicilian: stizza (via an unattested Vulgar Latin intermediate form)

References

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  • stiria”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • stiria”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
  • stiria”, in The Perseus Project (1999) Perseus Encyclopedia[1]
  • stiria”, in William Smith, editor (1854, 1857), A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography, volume 1 & 2, London: Walton and Maberly