-bilis

See also: bilis and bílis

Latin

Etymology

  • Inherited from Proto-Italic *-ðlis, from Proto-Indo-European i-stem form *-dʰlis of *-dʰlom (instrumental suffix). Akin to -bulum.

    Pronunciation

    Suffix

    -bilis (neuter -bile); third-declension two-termination suffix

    1. -(a)ble; used to form an adjective, usually from a verb, indicating a capacity or worth of being acted upon.

    Usage notes

    The suffix -bilis is added to a verb to form an adjectival noun of relationship to that verb.

    Examples:
    stabilis (stable), from stō (to stand)
    amābilis (lovely, worthy of love), from amō (to love)

    Sometimes it is added to the verb's perfect past participle stem (this should not be confused with derivatives of first-declension frequentative verbs, which have stems ending in -tā-).

    Examples:
    contemnō (to scorn, despise) + ‎-bilis → ‎contemptibilis (contemptible)
    flectō (to bend, curve) + ‎-bilis → ‎flexibilis (flexible, pliant, tractable)
    videō (to see) + ‎-bilis → ‎vīsibilis (visible)

    In a few cases, it becomes -ilis by haplology after a stem that ends in the consonant -b- (if these are not examples of the etymologically distinct suffix -ilis):

    habilis (handy, skillful), from habeō (to have) (with haplology, for *habibilis)
    nūbilis (marriageable), from nūbō (to marry) (with haplology, for *nūbibilis)

    Declension

    Third-declension two-termination adjective.

    singular plural
    masc./fem. neuter masc./fem. neuter
    nominative -bilis -bile -bilēs -bilia
    genitive -bilis -bilium
    dative -bilī -bilibus
    accusative -bilem -bile -bilēs
    -bilīs
    -bilia
    ablative -bilī -bilibus
    vocative -bilis -bile -bilēs -bilia
    • comparative: -bilior, superlative: -bilissimus

    Derived terms

    Latin terms suffixed with -bilis

    Descendants

    See also