cacula

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See also: càcula and caçula

Latin[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Military term, traditionally referred to Sanskrit शाक (śā́ka, helper, aide, friend). Or, possibly an Etruscan borrowing.[1]

Noun[edit]

cacula m (genitive caculae); first declension

  1. (military) servant, batman, orderly, military drudge
    • c. 195 BCE, Plautus, Trinummus 718–724:
      Quid ego nunc agam,
      nisi uti sarcinam constringam et clupeum ad dorsum accomodem,
      fulmentas iubeam suppingi soccis? Non sisti potest.
      Video caculam militarem me futurum hau longius:
      Atque aliquem ad regem in saginam si eru’ se coniexit meus,
      credo ad summos bellatores acrem – fugitorem fore
      et capturum spolia ibi illum qui meo ero advorsus venerit.
      What do I do now, if not to pack my knapsack, fit my shield on my back, and let fasten the heels under the shoes? It cannot be stopped.
      I see myself as a military drudge in a future not far:
      My master stepping into the service and nourishment of some king, I believe that with the mightiest warriors he will be the foremost in retreat
      And will seize spoils where someone shall come against my master.

Declension[edit]

First-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative cacula caculae
Genitive caculae caculārum
Dative caculae caculīs
Accusative caculam caculās
Ablative caculā caculīs
Vocative cacula caculae

Derived terms[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Classica Et Mediaevalia. (1945). United States: Librairie Gyldendal, p. 201