zephirum
Latin
Etymology
First used in 1202 by Italian mathematician Leonardo Fibonacci, borrowed from Arabic صِفْر (ṣifr, “nothing”, “cipher”).
Pronunciation
- (Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /ˈze.fi.rum/, [ˈd͡zeː.fi.rum]
Noun
zephirum n (genitive zephirī); second declension
- (Medieval Latin, mathematics) zero
- 1202, Leonardo Fibonacci, Liber Abaci, Chapter I.:
- Cum his itaque novem figuris, et cum hoc signo 0, quod arabice zephirum appellatur, scribitur quilibet numerus, [...]
- With these nine figures, and with this sign 0, which is called zero in Arabic, any number can be written, [...]
- Cum his itaque novem figuris, et cum hoc signo 0, quod arabice zephirum appellatur, scribitur quilibet numerus, [...]
- 1202, Leonardo Fibonacci, Liber Abaci, Chapter I.:
Inflection
Second declension.
| Case | Singular | Plural |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | zephirum | zephira |
| genitive | zephirī | zephirōrum |
| dative | zephirō | zephirīs |
| accusative | zephirum | zephira |
| ablative | zephirō | zephirīs |
| vocative | zephirum | zephira |
Related terms
- cifra f
Descendants
- New Latin: zerum
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