Sacratorius

Latin

Etymology

Perhaps from sacrātor +‎ -ius.

Pronunciation

Proper noun

Sacrātōrius m sg (genitive Sacrātōriī or Sacrātōrī); second declension

  1. a Roman nomen gentile, gens or "family name"
    • CIL 10, 503:
      Tudiciae M(arci) l(ibertae) Crotini / C(aius) Sacratorius Cinna / uxori et suis posteris
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)
    • BCAR-1923-125:
      Sacrator[ius] / N(umeri) et
      (mulieris) [l(ibertus)] / Speratus
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)

Declension

Second-declension noun, singular only.

singular
nominative Sacrātōrius
genitive Sacrātōriī
Sacrātōrī1
dative Sacrātōriō
accusative Sacrātōrium
ablative Sacrātōriō
vocative Sacrātōrī

1Found in older Latin (until the Augustan Age).

  • Sacrātōria

References

  • Margaret M. T. Watmough (1995), “The Suffix -tor-: Agent-Noun Formation in Latin and the Other Italic Languages”, in Glotta[1], volume 73, number 1/4, →ISSN, page 101
  • Walter Friedrich Otto (1898), Nomina propria Latina oriunda a participiis perfecti[2] (in Latin), Teubner, page 840
  • Beryl Rawson (1991), Marriage, divorce, and children in ancient Rome[3] (in Latin), Clarendon Press, →ISBN, page 172
  • Linda M. Gigante; George W. Houston (2008), “A Collection of Inscriptions from the Via Salaria Necropolis Now in the Speed Art Museum, Louisville, Kentucky”, in Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome[4], volume 53, →ISSN, pages 27–78