Nugipalamloquides

Etymology
From. Coined by Titus Maccius Plautus (Plaut. Pers. line 703). The term is a modern rendering of the word in the original text, which renders it as Nugiepiloquides, from. The reason why the term ends in loquides is because Plautus' original text was written in Old Latin. The letter t was often rendered as a d in Old Latin, meaning that the t in "locūtor" originally would have been a d, forming "-dor" instead of "-tor". As the term is in the third declension, the genitive form of "loquidor" in Old Latin could be rendered as "loquides", as the letter s often took the place of the letter r in Old Latin. Therefore, the term would be defined as "a person publicly speaking [on the subject] of nonsense.".

Adjective

 * 1) One who is a public speaker of nonsense.