[ˈɫʊ.tũː], [ˈluː.tum]
OriginFrom Proto-Indo-European *lew- (“dirt, mud”). Cognate with Old Irish loth (“mud”), Ancient Greek λῦμα (lûma, “dirt, filth”), Albanian lym (“mud”), Lithuanian liutýnas (“loam pit”).
- declension-2, neutersoil, dirt, mire, mud
- declension-2, neuterloam, clay
- declension-2The plant Reseda luteola used in dyeing yellow; weld, dyer's weed.
- declension-2The yellow coloring matter or dye extracted from this plant.
Formslutī(genitive) · lutum(nominative, singular) · luta(nominative, plural) · lutī(genitive, singular) · lutōrum(genitive, plural) · lutō(dative, singular) · lutīs(dative, plural) · lutum(accusative, singular) · luta(accusative, plural) · lutō(ablative, singular) · lutīs(ablative, plural) · lutum(singular, vocative) · luta(plural, vocative) · lutus(alternative) · lūtum(canonical, neuter) · lūtī(genitive) · lūtum(nominative, singular) · lūta(nominative, plural) · lūtī(genitive, singular) · lūtōrum(genitive, plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0