tomaculum
Latin
Alternative forms
- tomāclum, tumātulum, thumātulum, thymātulum
Etymology
Uncertain; probably derived in some way from Greek.[1]
Lewis and Short refer it to Greek Ancient Greek τομή (tomḗ, “cutting, incision, insection”), in which case the ending is presumably the instrument noun suffix -culum.
The manuscripts of Petronius and Juvenal show a variety of other spellings, including thumatula, tumatula and thymatula; C. Pellegrino, taking this family of spellings as the true reading, argued that the cited passages actually contain a diminutive derived from Greek θῡ́μᾰτᾰ (thū́mata) (the plural of θῦμᾰ (thûma, “sacrificial animal”).[2] However, it is difficult to get from the long vowel in Greek θῦμᾰ (thûma) to the short y̆/ŭ or ŏ attested by the scansion in Latin verse and required by Romance descendants that go back to a form *tomacella.[3]
Bodel also considers these spellings to represent the original form, but favors an alternative etymology proposed by Watkins from Greek θύμον (thúmon, “thyme”). In Latin, thymum + -ātus would yield an adjective *thumātus (“made with thyme”), which would form a diminutive in the neuter as *thumātum + -ulus > thumātulum (“sausage seasoned with thyme”). Compare myrtum (“myrtle berry”) + -ātus > myrtātum, murtātum (“sausage seasoned with myrtle berries”), possibly the source of Italian mortadella.[3]
Per Bodel, the form tomācinae in Varro Res Rusticae 2.4.10, sometimes cited as an alternative derivation from the same base, is unrelated and should be emended to Comacinae.[4]
Pronunciation
- (Classical) IPA(key): /toˈmaː.ku.lum/, [t̪ɔˈmäːkʊɫ̪ʊ̃ˑ]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /toˈma.ku.lum/, [t̪oˈmäːkulum]
Noun
tomāculum n (genitive tomāculī); second declension (uncommon)
- a type of sausage
- c. 27 CE – 66 CE, Petronius, Satyricon 49.10:
- Recepta cocus tunica cultrum arripuit porcique ventrem hinc atque illinc timida manu secuit. Nec mora, ex plagis ponderis inclinatione crescentibus tomacula cum botulis effusa sunt.
- Putting on a tunic, the cook seized a knife and cut the pig's belly here and there with a fearful hand. At once, out of the gashes that were widenening from the weight, tomacula with botuli rushed out.
- Recepta cocus tunica cultrum arripuit porcique ventrem hinc atque illinc timida manu secuit. Nec mora, ex plagis ponderis inclinatione crescentibus tomacula cum botulis effusa sunt.
- c. 100 CE – c. 130 CE, Juvenal, Satires 10.355, (dactylic hexameter):
- U͞t tămĕn e͞t po͞scās ălĭqui͞d vŏvĕāsquĕ săce͞llīs
e͞xta e͞t ca͞ndĭdŭlī dīvīnă tŏmācŭlă po͞rcī,
ōra͞ndum e͞st u͞t si͞t mēns sāna i͞n co͞rpŏrĕ sānō.- Yet also if you request something and dedicate at shrines
the entrails and sacrificial tomacula of a shining white piglet,
your prayer should be for a healthy mind in a healthy body.
- Yet also if you request something and dedicate at shrines
- U͞t tămĕn e͞t po͞scās ălĭqui͞d vŏvĕāsquĕ săce͞llīs
- 86 CE – 103 CE, Martial, Epigrammata 1.41.9, (Phalacean hendecasyllable):
- quo͞d fūma͞ntĭă quī tŏmāclă ra͞ucu͞s
Ci͞rcu͞mfe͞rt tĕpĭdīs cŏcu͞s pŏpīnīs- ...hoarse cook who carries around smoking tomacla at tepid eating-houses
- quo͞d fūma͞ntĭă quī tŏmāclă ra͞ucu͞s
Declension
Second-declension noun (neuter).
Case | Singular | Plural |
---|---|---|
Nominative | tomāculum | tomācula |
Genitive | tomāculī | tomāculōrum |
Dative | tomāculō | tomāculīs |
Accusative | tomāculum | tomācula |
Ablative | tomāculō | tomāculīs |
Vocative | tomāculum | tomācula |
References
- Schrijver, Peter C. H. (1991) The reflexes of the Proto-Indo-European laryngeals in Latin (Leiden studies in Indo-European; 2), Amsterdam, Atlanta: Rodopi, →ISBN, page 119
- Bodel, J. (1989) “Missing Links: Thymatulum or Tomaculum?”, in Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, volume 92, , page 351 of 349–366
- Bodel, page 358
- Bodel, page 356
Further reading
- “tomaculum”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- “tomaculum”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
- tomaculum in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.