grandis

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See also: Grandis

French

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Pronunciation

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Verb

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grandis

  1. inflection of grandir:
    1. first/second-person singular present indicative
    2. first/second-person singular past historic
    3. second-person singular imperative

Participle

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grandis m pl

  1. masculine plural of grandi

Latin

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Etymology

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    From Proto-Italic *grandis, of unclear origin.

    Traditionally derived from Proto-Indo-European *gʰer- (to rub, to grind), and connected to Proto-Germanic *grautaz (big in size, coarse, coarse grained) (whence English great). A different etymology, favored by Pokorny, derives the word from Proto-Indo-European *gʷʰrendʰ- (to swell), and connects the word to Ancient Greek βρένθος (brénthos, arrogance) and Proto-Slavic *grǫ̑dь (breast).

    However, De Vaan rejects the latter (and doesn't mention the former) due to phonetic difficulties and the wide semantic gap between "breast-pride" and "breast-large".

    Pronunciation

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    Adjective

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    grandis (neuter grande, comparative grandior, superlative grandissimus, adverb grandē or granditer); third-declension two-termination adjective

    1. full-grown, grown up
    2. large, great, grand, lofty, big
      Synonym: magnus
      Antonym: parvus
    3. powerful
    4. aged, old

    Declension

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    Third-declension two-termination adjective, with locative.

    Derived terms

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    Descendants

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    References

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