Talk:cacoethes

Latin
-84.161.62.81 05:12, 9 July 2017 (UTC)
 * As for ancient Latin, dictionaries give the plural cacoethe (not cacoetha), but the plural could often be mentioning-y.
 * As for New Latin, cacoethes could also be an adjectives and it could have a masculine form and neuter plurals cacoethe, cacoethia and cacotha.
 * In the given example with "ad ulcera cacoëthe" it could be an adjective meaning "to malignant ulcers".
 * 1 has "Cacoethes morbus ....", "Cacoethes ulcus ...", "ad Cacoethes nomas", "ad Cacoethe ulcera ..." where cacothes could be masc. sing., neuter sing. and fem. acc. plur.
 * 2 with "... ulcera cacoethae ..." could mistreat cacoethes as first declension noun and mean the "ulcers of the malignant disease"
 * 3 with "ulcera cacoethia"