cimex

See also: Cimex

English

Wikispecies

Etymology

From the genus name Cimex, from Latin cīmex (bug). Doublet of chinch.

Noun

cimex (plural cimices)

  1. Any member of the genus Cimex, especially the bedbug.
    • 1855, Henry G Dalton, The history of British Guiana:
      Some of these cimices are extremely pretty, but if handled emit their disagreeable perfume. I have met with about a dozen species of these bugs.
    • 1967, Merritt E Lawlis, Elizabethan prose fiction:
      There was a poor fellow during my remainder there that, for a new trick he had invented of killing cimices and scorpions, had his mountebank banner hung up...

Latin

Etymology

Unknown origin.

Pronunciation

Noun

cīmex m (genitive cīmicis); third declension

  1. bug
  2. bedbug

Declension

Third-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative cīmex cīmicēs
Genitive cīmicis cīmicum
Dative cīmicī cīmicibus
Accusative cīmicem cīmicēs
Ablative cīmice cīmicibus
Vocative cīmex cīmicēs

Descendants

  • Balkan Romance:
    • Romanian: cince
  • Dalmatian:
  • Italo-Romance:
    • Italian: cimice
    • Neapolitan: pimmece
    • Sicilian: cimicia
  • Padanian:
    • Emilian: samze, semze semza, simza, sümesa
    • Lombard: simes, sumas, sisme, sùmec, sumèc, sìmec sumèga, simèga
    • Piedmontese: sims, simis, simes, sums
    • Romagnol: semze, semz semza
  • Gallo-Romance:
    • Old Catalan: címeu
    • Occitan: címec, cimèc, cìmet, cime, cimze, cindre, cimi, cime, çumi
  • Ibero-Romance: f
  • Insular Romance:
  • Borrowings:
  • Albanian: qimqë
  • Basque: zimitz
  • English: cimex
  • Esperanto: cimo
  • Translingual: Cimex

References

  • cimex”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • cimex”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
  • cimex in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
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