aulic

التعريفات والمعاني

== English == === Pronunciation === (UK) IPA(key): /ˈɔː.lɪk/ (General American) /ˈɔ.lɪk/ (cot–caught merger) /ˈɑ.lɪk/ Rhymes: -ɔːlɪk === Etymology 1 === From Latin aulicus (“of a prince's court”), from aula (“royal court”), from Ancient Greek αὐλή (aulḗ, “courtyard”). ==== Adjective ==== aulic (comparative more aulic, superlative most aulic) Of or pertaining to a royal court; courtly. (architecture) Of, pertaining to, or resembling a palace. Solemn. 2007, Francesco Carapezza, Giacomo Pugliese (fl. 1220—1240), entry in Gaetana Marrone (editor), Encyclopedia of Italian Literary Studies, page 833, Otherwise, Giacomino's most aulic and rhetorically ambitious piece is a lament for the death of the beloved, Morte, perché m'hai fatta sì gran guerra (Death, Why Have You Warred Against Me So), the oldest Italian example of its kind, together with Pier della Vigne's "Amando con fin core e con speranza." 2011, Andrew Frisardi, Introduction, Dante Alighieri, Andrew Frisardi (translator), Vita Nova, page xxii, Other times, for heightened effect, the language is in a more aulic register, laced with Latinisms and with words derived from the Provençal and Sicilian traditions. ===== Derived terms ===== ==== Noun ==== aulic (plural aulics) A ceremony at some European universities to confer a Doctor of Divinity degree. === Etymology 2 === From Ancient Greek αὐλός (aulós, “hollow tube, pipe”). ==== Adjective ==== aulic (not comparable) (biology) Pertaining to the reproductive ducts of certain organisms. ===== Derived terms ===== aulicism diaulic monaulic triaulic === Anagrams === Lucia, cauli == Romanian == === Etymology === Borrowed from Latin aulicus or French aulique. === Adjective === aulic m or n (feminine singular aulică, masculine plural aulici, feminine/neuter plural aulice) aulic ==== Declension ====