[ˈɛu̯.ãːs], [ˈɛːu̯.ans]
OriginCalque of Ancient Greek εὐάζων (euázōn), from εὐάζω (euázō).
- declension-3, one-terminationa cry celebrating Bacchus during a festival in his honour
“saepe vagus Līber Parnassī vertice summō
Thȳiadas effūsīs euantēs crīnibus ēgit,
cum Delphī tōtā certātim ex urbe ruentēs” — (please add an English translation of this quotation)
Formse͡uāns(canonical) · e͡uantis(genitive) · e͡uāns(feminine, masculine, neuter, nominative, singular) · e͡uantēs(feminine, masculine, nominative, plural) · e͡uantia(neuter, nominative, plural) · e͡uantis(feminine, genitive, masculine, neuter, singular) · e͡uantium(feminine, genitive, masculine, neuter, plural) · e͡uantī(dative, feminine, masculine, neuter, singular) · e͡uantibus(dative, feminine, masculine, neuter, plural) · e͡uantem(accusative, feminine, masculine, singular) · e͡uāns(accusative, neuter, singular) · e͡uantīs(accusative, feminine, masculine, plural) · e͡uantēs(accusative, feminine, masculine, plural) · e͡uantia(accusative, neuter, plural) · e͡uantī(ablative, feminine, masculine, singular) · e͡uante(ablative, feminine, masculine, singular) · e͡uantī(ablative, neuter, singular) · e͡uantibus(ablative, feminine, masculine, neuter, plural) · e͡uāns(feminine, masculine, neuter, singular, vocative) · e͡uantēs(feminine, masculine, plural, vocative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0