[ˈdeː.sɛs], [ˈdɛː.s̬es]
OriginFrom dēsideo + -s, from sedeō.
- declension-3, one-terminationidle
“Temperies vitalis abest, et nulla sub illa
Cura Iovis terra est; natura deside torpet” — The temperate air that life needs is not found there, and Jupiter pays no heed to the land; Nature is inactive; the lifeless expanse, with sands that are never ploughed, is unconscious of the seasons.
“Iamque alio moliris iter nec deside passu
ire paras; nondum validae tibi signa iuventae” — And now thou art planning a journey to other lands, and art preparing to be gone with no sluggish stride; not yet have the signs of vigorous manhood crept about thy cheeks, blameless still is the teno
“primitias egomet lacrimarum et caedis acerbae
ante tubas ferrumque tuli, dum deside cura” — Tis I that have borne the first-fruits of grief and untimely death, before even trumpets brayed or sword was drawn, while in indolent neglect I put faith in his nurse's bosom and entrusted to her my b
Formsdēses(canonical) · dēsidis(genitive) · dēses(feminine, masculine, neuter, nominative, singular) · dēsidēs(feminine, masculine, nominative, plural) · dēsidia(neuter, nominative, plural) · dēsidis(feminine, genitive, masculine, neuter, singular) · dēsidium(feminine, genitive, masculine, neuter, plural) · dēsidī(dative, feminine, masculine, neuter, singular) · dēsidibus(dative, feminine, masculine, neuter, plural) · dēsidem(accusative, feminine, masculine, singular) · dēses(accusative, neuter, singular) · dēsidīs(accusative, feminine, masculine, plural) · dēsidēs(accusative, feminine, masculine, plural) · dēsidia(accusative, neuter, plural) · dēsidī(ablative, feminine, masculine, singular) · dēside(ablative, feminine, masculine, singular) · dēsidī(ablative, neuter, singular) · dēsidibus(ablative, feminine, masculine, neuter, plural) · dēses(feminine, masculine, neuter, singular, vocative) · dēsidēs(feminine, masculine, plural, vocative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0