simultaneum
English
Etymology
From New Latin simultaneum, from simul (“at the same time”).
Noun
simultaneum (plural simultanea)
- A simultaneous occurrence of unrelated events.
- (Christianity) The shared use of a church for both Protestant and Catholic services.
Latin
Etymology
From simul (“at the same time”).
Noun
simultāneum n (genitive simultāneī); second declension
- (New Latin) simultaneum
- 1739 — Alexander Gottlieb Baumgarten, Metaphysica Pars I. Ontologia (III, 1, 282)
- Ergo simultanea sibi invicem extra se posita non sunt in eodem loco.
- Therefore simultanea are not themselves mutually located in the same place from without by situation.
- 1739 — Alexander Gottlieb Baumgarten, Metaphysica Pars I. Ontologia (III, 1, 282)
Inflection
Second declension.
| Case | Singular | Plural |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | simultāneum | simultānea |
| genitive | simultāneī | simultāneōrum |
| dative | simultāneō | simultāneīs |
| accusative | simultāneum | simultānea |
| ablative | simultāneō | simultāneīs |
| vocative | simultāneum | simultānea |
Descendants
- English: simultaneum
- French: simultaneum
- German: Simultaneum
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