sophus

Etymology
From. Compare to 🇨🇬.

Adjective

 * 1) Wise, sage, shrewd.
 * 2) * Ælfric Bata, edited by Scott Gwara and translated into English by David W. Porter, Anglo-Saxon Conversations: The colloquies of Ælfric Bata, 1997, page 184f.:
 * Consultius est uobis esse sophos quam stolidos et ebetes [= hebetes] uel inertes et ignaros.
 * It is better for you to be wise than foolish, dull, lazy or ignorant.
 * It is better for you to be wise than foolish, dull, lazy or ignorant.

Declension
Note: The feminine and the neuter forms are unattested.

Noun

 * 1) A wise man, a sage.

Declension
Note:

Several inflected forms could belong to both and sophus, as for example the genitive plural sophōrum in this medieval text: A form which only belongs to sophus and not to sophos occurs in these medieval mentionings:
 * Monumenta Germaniae historicae. Poetarum latinorum medii aevi tomus I. – Poetae latini aevi Carolini. Tomus I edited by Ernestus Duemmler, Berlin, 1881, page 294 containing Alcuinus (or Albinus), carmina, LXXII:
 * [...] simul argumenta sophorum, [...]
 * Classicorum auctorum e vaticanis codibus editorum tomus VIII: Thesaurus novus latinatis, sive lexicon vetus e membranis nunc primum erutum, edited by A. M. (= Angelus Maius), Roma, 1836, page 544 (first and second declension adjective are commonly mentioned as ...us, a, um in it) – this work is elsewhere attributed to Osbern of Gloucester, in German to Osbern von Gloucester with the title "Panormia oder Derivationes":
 * [...] inde hic sophus † sapiens [...]
 * Uguccione da Pisa – Derivationes – Edizione critica princeps a cura di Enzo Cecchini, 2004 containing the Derivationes by Hugutio Pisanus or Huguccio Pisanus (Italian Uguccione da Pisa, English Huguccio of Pisa, Hugutio of Pisa or Hugh of Pisa):
 * SOPHOS grece, latine dicitur sapiens vel cautus, sapienter dictus, et versa -os in -us dicitur hic sophus -phi, idest sapiens;