[ˈtoː.tʊs], [ˈtɔː.tus]
OriginUncertain.
Perhaps related to Oscan 𐌕𐌞𐌅𐌕𐌞 (túvtú), Umbrian 𐌕𐌏𐌕𐌀𐌌 (totam, “tribe”, acc.), from Proto-Italic *toutā (“people; populace, citizenship”), from Proto-Indo-European *tewtéh₂ (“people”).
- adjective, declension-1, declension-2whole, all, entire, total, complete, every part
“[…] nōn esse dubium quīn tōtīus Galliae plūrimum Helvētiī possent […] .” — [Orgetorix claimed that] there was no doubt that the Helvetii were the most [powerful] of all the Gallic [tribes] […] .
- adjective, declension-1, declension-2all together, all at once
- adjective, declension-1, declension-2, rareso great a ——
“quotcumque pedum spatia facienda censueris, totam partem longitudinis et latitudinis duces” — of however many feet you have determined the gaps are to be made, you will take as great a part of the length and breadth
Formstōtus(canonical) · tōta(feminine) · tōtum(neuter) · declension(pronominal) · tōtus(masculine, nominative, singular) · tōta(feminine, nominative, singular) · tōtum(neuter, nominative, singular) · tōtī(masculine, nominative, plural) · tōtae(feminine, nominative, plural) · tōta(neuter, nominative, plural) · tōtī̆us(feminine, genitive, masculine, neuter, singular) · tōtōrum(genitive, masculine, plural) · tōtārum(feminine, genitive, plural) · tōtōrum(genitive, neuter, plural) · tōtī(dative, feminine, masculine, neuter, singular) · tōtīs(dative, feminine, masculine, neuter, plural) · tōtum(accusative, masculine, singular) · tōtam(accusative, feminine, singular) · tōtum(accusative, neuter, singular) · tōtōs(accusative, masculine, plural)