English

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Etymology

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From Latin -ōrium, -tōrium.

Pronunciation

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Suffix

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-orium (plural -oriums or -oria)

  1. forming nouns denoting a place for a particular function.
    • 1933 July 9, Ellis Parker Butler, “Enough Is Sufficient”, in Los Angeles Times, volume LII, page 6, columns 2–3:
      “It’s a pickle jar,” said Alice. “It’s one of the new kind called a pickelorium.”

Derived terms

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Latin

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Etymology

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From rebracketing of -tōrium or alteration of -ārium, perhaps also influenced in some cases by the abstract noun suffix -or (as in sūdōrium, a medieval alternative form of sūdārium, from sūdor).

Pronunciation

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Suffix

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-ōrium n (genitive -ōriī); second declension (Medieval Latin)

  1. Suffix forming nouns, usually denoting places or objects
    lavō (to wash, bathe)lavōrium (washroom, wash basin) (also lavārium)
    servō (to preserve, reserve)servōrium (fish pond, fish tank) (also servārium, servātōrium)
    ferveō (to boil) and fervor (boiling heat)fervōrium (cauldron)

Declension

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Second-declension noun (neuter).

singular plural
nominative -ōrium -ōria
genitive -ōriī -ōriōrum
dative -ōriō -ōriīs
accusative -ōrium -ōria
ablative -ōriō -ōriīs
vocative -ōrium -ōria