[ˈseː.deːs], [ˈsɛː.des]
OriginUltimately from sedeō (“I sit”) + -ēs, though Latin and Proto-Italic did not productively form nouns from verbs by changing the vowel grade. The word's lengthened grade is similar to Proto-Germanic *sētiją (“seat”), and ultimately they likely have a common origin, though divergence in the suffixes leaves the exact ancestral protoform obscure.
- declension-3seat, chair
- declension-3place, residence, settlement, habitation, abode
“Sēdēs huic nostrō nōn importūna sermōnī.” — A place not unsuitable for this conversation of ours.
- active, form-of, indicative, present, second-personsecond-person singular present active indicative of sedeō
Formssēdēs(canonical, feminine) · sēdis(genitive) · sēdēs(nominative, singular) · sēdēs(nominative, plural) · sēdis(genitive, singular) · sēdium(genitive, plural) · sēdī(dative, singular) · sēdibus(dative, plural) · sēdem(accusative, singular) · sēdēs(accusative, plural) · sēdīs(accusative, plural) · sēde(ablative, singular) · sēdibus(ablative, plural) · sēdēs(singular, vocative) · sēdēs(plural, vocative) · sedēs(canonical)