sabaia
Latin
Alternative forms
- sabaium
Etymology
From Illyrian, probably originally from Proto-Indo-European *sab- (“taste”), whence German Saft, English sap, and Sanskrit सबर् (sabar).[1]
Pronunciation
- (Classical) IPA(key): /saˈbaj.ja/
Noun
sabaia f (genitive sabaiae); first declension
- A kind of Illyrian beer, made out of barley or wheat.
- Est autem sabaia ex ordeo vel frumento in liquorem conversus paupertinus in Illyrico potus. [2]
- Sabaia is a wretched drink made in Illyria out of barley or wheat.
-
Declension
First declension.
| Case | Singular |
|---|---|
| nominative | sabaia |
| genitive | sabaiae |
| dative | sabaiae |
| accusative | sabaiam |
| ablative | sabaiā |
| vocative | sabaia |
Derived terms
- sabaiārius (“beer-drinker; drinker of sabaia”)[2]
References
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