Pompeii
See also: Pompei
English
    
    Etymology
    
Borrowed from Latin Pompeii, from Oscan 𐌐𐌖𐌌𐌐𐌄 (pumpe, “five”), a reference to its five districts. Doublet of five, cinque, punch, and pimp.
Pronunciation
    
Proper noun
    
Pompeii
Translations
    
a historical city
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 | 
Latin
    
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Karl Bryullov's The Last Day of Pompeii (1830-3)

Jakob Philipp Hackert's The Excavations at Pompeii (1799)
Alternative forms
    
Etymology
    
Borrowed from Oscan [Term?], from Oscan 𐌐𐌖𐌌𐌐𐌄 (pumpe, “five”) + -eius. A reference to the city's five districts, from Proto-Italic *kʷenkʷe, from Proto-Indo-European *pénkʷe. See also the gens name Pompeius and quīnque, the native word for “five”.
Pronunciation
    
- (Classical) IPA(key): /pomˈpei̯.i̯iː/, [pɔmˈpɛi̯ːiː]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /pomˈpe.ji/, [pomˈpɛːji]
Proper noun
    
Pompeiī m pl (genitive Pompeiōrum); second declension
Declension
    
Second-declension noun, with locative, plural only.
| Case | Plural | 
|---|---|
| Nominative | Pompeiī | 
| Genitive | Pompeiōrum | 
| Dative | Pompeiīs | 
| Accusative | Pompeiōs | 
| Ablative | Pompeiīs | 
| Vocative | Pompeiī | 
| Locative | Pompeiīs | 
Derived terms
    
- Pompeiānī m pl (“inhabitants of Pompeii”, noun)
- Pompeiānum n (“a villa of Cicero near Pompeii”, noun)
- Pompeiānus (“of, belonging to Pompeii”, adjective)
Related terms
    
References
    
- “Pompeii”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
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