Which are the longest words in Latin?












7














Today I was reading 1 Samuel 5 in the Vulgata and in verse 9 these two words are found:




... circumducentibus ... computrescebant ...




which surprised me for their length (16 and 15 letters respectively). So, which are the longest, attested words in Latin? Is Honorificabilitudinitatibus the longest? (27 letters...horrible word, btw) Which are other examples of very long (say, +25 letters) words?










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  • 1




    Are you looking for attested words, or are we free to coin new words? In principle one can derive without limits.
    – Joonas Ilmavirta
    Nov 22 '18 at 10:41










  • @JoonasIlmavirta Attested words, for sure. I was not aware you could create your own words. Looks like an interesting question itself.
    – luchonacho
    Nov 22 '18 at 10:59






  • 2




    You can indeed create your own words using existing words and a toolbox of new elements you can add. You can certainly ask a question about that. If you are only looking for attested words here (you could specify that in the question), I won't give an answer about extending words more or less artificially.
    – Joonas Ilmavirta
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:02










  • @JoonasIlmavirta But the fact I can put together words does not mean it becomes an official word. Maybe that's how all words end up being official in the long term (i.e. by someone using them and hanging around), but that's a separated issue.
    – luchonacho
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:04








  • 2




    Aristophanes went a little too far in deriving a new word. Greek is somewhat more flexible with compound words than Latin, though.
    – Joonas Ilmavirta
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:39
















7














Today I was reading 1 Samuel 5 in the Vulgata and in verse 9 these two words are found:




... circumducentibus ... computrescebant ...




which surprised me for their length (16 and 15 letters respectively). So, which are the longest, attested words in Latin? Is Honorificabilitudinitatibus the longest? (27 letters...horrible word, btw) Which are other examples of very long (say, +25 letters) words?










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    Are you looking for attested words, or are we free to coin new words? In principle one can derive without limits.
    – Joonas Ilmavirta
    Nov 22 '18 at 10:41










  • @JoonasIlmavirta Attested words, for sure. I was not aware you could create your own words. Looks like an interesting question itself.
    – luchonacho
    Nov 22 '18 at 10:59






  • 2




    You can indeed create your own words using existing words and a toolbox of new elements you can add. You can certainly ask a question about that. If you are only looking for attested words here (you could specify that in the question), I won't give an answer about extending words more or less artificially.
    – Joonas Ilmavirta
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:02










  • @JoonasIlmavirta But the fact I can put together words does not mean it becomes an official word. Maybe that's how all words end up being official in the long term (i.e. by someone using them and hanging around), but that's a separated issue.
    – luchonacho
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:04








  • 2




    Aristophanes went a little too far in deriving a new word. Greek is somewhat more flexible with compound words than Latin, though.
    – Joonas Ilmavirta
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:39














7












7








7







Today I was reading 1 Samuel 5 in the Vulgata and in verse 9 these two words are found:




... circumducentibus ... computrescebant ...




which surprised me for their length (16 and 15 letters respectively). So, which are the longest, attested words in Latin? Is Honorificabilitudinitatibus the longest? (27 letters...horrible word, btw) Which are other examples of very long (say, +25 letters) words?










share|improve this question















Today I was reading 1 Samuel 5 in the Vulgata and in verse 9 these two words are found:




... circumducentibus ... computrescebant ...




which surprised me for their length (16 and 15 letters respectively). So, which are the longest, attested words in Latin? Is Honorificabilitudinitatibus the longest? (27 letters...horrible word, btw) Which are other examples of very long (say, +25 letters) words?







text-corpus






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 22 '18 at 19:40







luchonacho

















asked Nov 22 '18 at 9:19









luchonacholuchonacho

4,46231050




4,46231050








  • 1




    Are you looking for attested words, or are we free to coin new words? In principle one can derive without limits.
    – Joonas Ilmavirta
    Nov 22 '18 at 10:41










  • @JoonasIlmavirta Attested words, for sure. I was not aware you could create your own words. Looks like an interesting question itself.
    – luchonacho
    Nov 22 '18 at 10:59






  • 2




    You can indeed create your own words using existing words and a toolbox of new elements you can add. You can certainly ask a question about that. If you are only looking for attested words here (you could specify that in the question), I won't give an answer about extending words more or less artificially.
    – Joonas Ilmavirta
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:02










  • @JoonasIlmavirta But the fact I can put together words does not mean it becomes an official word. Maybe that's how all words end up being official in the long term (i.e. by someone using them and hanging around), but that's a separated issue.
    – luchonacho
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:04








  • 2




    Aristophanes went a little too far in deriving a new word. Greek is somewhat more flexible with compound words than Latin, though.
    – Joonas Ilmavirta
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:39














  • 1




    Are you looking for attested words, or are we free to coin new words? In principle one can derive without limits.
    – Joonas Ilmavirta
    Nov 22 '18 at 10:41










  • @JoonasIlmavirta Attested words, for sure. I was not aware you could create your own words. Looks like an interesting question itself.
    – luchonacho
    Nov 22 '18 at 10:59






  • 2




    You can indeed create your own words using existing words and a toolbox of new elements you can add. You can certainly ask a question about that. If you are only looking for attested words here (you could specify that in the question), I won't give an answer about extending words more or less artificially.
    – Joonas Ilmavirta
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:02










  • @JoonasIlmavirta But the fact I can put together words does not mean it becomes an official word. Maybe that's how all words end up being official in the long term (i.e. by someone using them and hanging around), but that's a separated issue.
    – luchonacho
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:04








  • 2




    Aristophanes went a little too far in deriving a new word. Greek is somewhat more flexible with compound words than Latin, though.
    – Joonas Ilmavirta
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:39








1




1




Are you looking for attested words, or are we free to coin new words? In principle one can derive without limits.
– Joonas Ilmavirta
Nov 22 '18 at 10:41




Are you looking for attested words, or are we free to coin new words? In principle one can derive without limits.
– Joonas Ilmavirta
Nov 22 '18 at 10:41












@JoonasIlmavirta Attested words, for sure. I was not aware you could create your own words. Looks like an interesting question itself.
– luchonacho
Nov 22 '18 at 10:59




@JoonasIlmavirta Attested words, for sure. I was not aware you could create your own words. Looks like an interesting question itself.
– luchonacho
Nov 22 '18 at 10:59




2




2




You can indeed create your own words using existing words and a toolbox of new elements you can add. You can certainly ask a question about that. If you are only looking for attested words here (you could specify that in the question), I won't give an answer about extending words more or less artificially.
– Joonas Ilmavirta
Nov 22 '18 at 11:02




You can indeed create your own words using existing words and a toolbox of new elements you can add. You can certainly ask a question about that. If you are only looking for attested words here (you could specify that in the question), I won't give an answer about extending words more or less artificially.
– Joonas Ilmavirta
Nov 22 '18 at 11:02












@JoonasIlmavirta But the fact I can put together words does not mean it becomes an official word. Maybe that's how all words end up being official in the long term (i.e. by someone using them and hanging around), but that's a separated issue.
– luchonacho
Nov 22 '18 at 11:04






@JoonasIlmavirta But the fact I can put together words does not mean it becomes an official word. Maybe that's how all words end up being official in the long term (i.e. by someone using them and hanging around), but that's a separated issue.
– luchonacho
Nov 22 '18 at 11:04






2




2




Aristophanes went a little too far in deriving a new word. Greek is somewhat more flexible with compound words than Latin, though.
– Joonas Ilmavirta
Nov 22 '18 at 11:39




Aristophanes went a little too far in deriving a new word. Greek is somewhat more flexible with compound words than Latin, though.
– Joonas Ilmavirta
Nov 22 '18 at 11:39










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















9














Your word, honorificabilitudinitatibus, seems to be commonly regarded as the longest, and it has the distinction of being used by Shakespeare.



However, there's also this one with 28 letters:




floccinaucinihilipilificatio,




which is the action or habit of estimating something as worthless.



Although the latter is longer by one letter, it was coined by students at Eton College as a humorous word. It can be broken down as follows:




floccus (“a wisp”) +‎ naucum (“a trifle”) +‎ nihilum (“nothing”) +‎ pilus (“a hair”) + ficatio




Given that floccinaucinihilipilificatio is of late coinage, I believe that honorificabilitudinitatibus is most likely the winner. Besides being used by Shakespeare, it wasn't coined by him. Rather, it appeared long before his day, such as in the following dictionary entry by Johannes Balbus in 1286:



enter image description here






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    But wait.... the word you mention is an English word. Sure, it's composed of Latin terms, but it seems it's never been used in a Latin context. Maybe the one I mentioned hasn't been either!
    – luchonacho
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:02






  • 2




    Brilliant find, EB.
    – Hugh
    Nov 22 '18 at 15:08






  • 2




    To be more accurate, Shakespeare didn't use it, he mentioned it. Or, to put it another way, he used it not to express a meaning, but to put into the mouth of the character Costard in Love's Labour's Lost, for him to cite it as a very long word (again, not to express a meaning). The Balbus is, as you say, a dictionary entry, so he cites the word just to define it, not to use it. And where Balbus spells its -ibus form in full, is this merely to cite it as a very long (longissima) word? What's the longest attested Latin word used to express its meaning, not just cited for its length?
    – Rosie F
    Nov 22 '18 at 19:15






  • 1




    @RosieF. Either way, we agree that Shakespeare used it. I'm fine with that.
    – Expedito Bipes
    Nov 22 '18 at 19:30






  • 2




    @ExpeditoBipes Please don't misrepresent me. Read my earlier comment's first two sentences in full, rather than taking a few words from them out of context.
    – Rosie F
    Nov 22 '18 at 19:33



















2














First of all, with all due respect, this word is not Classical Latin; it’s a Medieval Latin neologism (a nonce word) that was occasionally used solely because of its length.



Secondly, honorificabilitudinitatibus is technically a word form, not a word (i.e. it’s not a lexeme).



Afaik, it is first encountered in a treatise written by Peter of Pisa, an eighth century Italian grammarian, who, incidentally, taught Latin to Charlemagne.



Here’s the screenshot:



enter image description here






share|improve this answer























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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









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    active

    oldest

    votes









    9














    Your word, honorificabilitudinitatibus, seems to be commonly regarded as the longest, and it has the distinction of being used by Shakespeare.



    However, there's also this one with 28 letters:




    floccinaucinihilipilificatio,




    which is the action or habit of estimating something as worthless.



    Although the latter is longer by one letter, it was coined by students at Eton College as a humorous word. It can be broken down as follows:




    floccus (“a wisp”) +‎ naucum (“a trifle”) +‎ nihilum (“nothing”) +‎ pilus (“a hair”) + ficatio




    Given that floccinaucinihilipilificatio is of late coinage, I believe that honorificabilitudinitatibus is most likely the winner. Besides being used by Shakespeare, it wasn't coined by him. Rather, it appeared long before his day, such as in the following dictionary entry by Johannes Balbus in 1286:



    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer



















    • 2




      But wait.... the word you mention is an English word. Sure, it's composed of Latin terms, but it seems it's never been used in a Latin context. Maybe the one I mentioned hasn't been either!
      – luchonacho
      Nov 22 '18 at 11:02






    • 2




      Brilliant find, EB.
      – Hugh
      Nov 22 '18 at 15:08






    • 2




      To be more accurate, Shakespeare didn't use it, he mentioned it. Or, to put it another way, he used it not to express a meaning, but to put into the mouth of the character Costard in Love's Labour's Lost, for him to cite it as a very long word (again, not to express a meaning). The Balbus is, as you say, a dictionary entry, so he cites the word just to define it, not to use it. And where Balbus spells its -ibus form in full, is this merely to cite it as a very long (longissima) word? What's the longest attested Latin word used to express its meaning, not just cited for its length?
      – Rosie F
      Nov 22 '18 at 19:15






    • 1




      @RosieF. Either way, we agree that Shakespeare used it. I'm fine with that.
      – Expedito Bipes
      Nov 22 '18 at 19:30






    • 2




      @ExpeditoBipes Please don't misrepresent me. Read my earlier comment's first two sentences in full, rather than taking a few words from them out of context.
      – Rosie F
      Nov 22 '18 at 19:33
















    9














    Your word, honorificabilitudinitatibus, seems to be commonly regarded as the longest, and it has the distinction of being used by Shakespeare.



    However, there's also this one with 28 letters:




    floccinaucinihilipilificatio,




    which is the action or habit of estimating something as worthless.



    Although the latter is longer by one letter, it was coined by students at Eton College as a humorous word. It can be broken down as follows:




    floccus (“a wisp”) +‎ naucum (“a trifle”) +‎ nihilum (“nothing”) +‎ pilus (“a hair”) + ficatio




    Given that floccinaucinihilipilificatio is of late coinage, I believe that honorificabilitudinitatibus is most likely the winner. Besides being used by Shakespeare, it wasn't coined by him. Rather, it appeared long before his day, such as in the following dictionary entry by Johannes Balbus in 1286:



    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer



















    • 2




      But wait.... the word you mention is an English word. Sure, it's composed of Latin terms, but it seems it's never been used in a Latin context. Maybe the one I mentioned hasn't been either!
      – luchonacho
      Nov 22 '18 at 11:02






    • 2




      Brilliant find, EB.
      – Hugh
      Nov 22 '18 at 15:08






    • 2




      To be more accurate, Shakespeare didn't use it, he mentioned it. Or, to put it another way, he used it not to express a meaning, but to put into the mouth of the character Costard in Love's Labour's Lost, for him to cite it as a very long word (again, not to express a meaning). The Balbus is, as you say, a dictionary entry, so he cites the word just to define it, not to use it. And where Balbus spells its -ibus form in full, is this merely to cite it as a very long (longissima) word? What's the longest attested Latin word used to express its meaning, not just cited for its length?
      – Rosie F
      Nov 22 '18 at 19:15






    • 1




      @RosieF. Either way, we agree that Shakespeare used it. I'm fine with that.
      – Expedito Bipes
      Nov 22 '18 at 19:30






    • 2




      @ExpeditoBipes Please don't misrepresent me. Read my earlier comment's first two sentences in full, rather than taking a few words from them out of context.
      – Rosie F
      Nov 22 '18 at 19:33














    9












    9








    9






    Your word, honorificabilitudinitatibus, seems to be commonly regarded as the longest, and it has the distinction of being used by Shakespeare.



    However, there's also this one with 28 letters:




    floccinaucinihilipilificatio,




    which is the action or habit of estimating something as worthless.



    Although the latter is longer by one letter, it was coined by students at Eton College as a humorous word. It can be broken down as follows:




    floccus (“a wisp”) +‎ naucum (“a trifle”) +‎ nihilum (“nothing”) +‎ pilus (“a hair”) + ficatio




    Given that floccinaucinihilipilificatio is of late coinage, I believe that honorificabilitudinitatibus is most likely the winner. Besides being used by Shakespeare, it wasn't coined by him. Rather, it appeared long before his day, such as in the following dictionary entry by Johannes Balbus in 1286:



    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer














    Your word, honorificabilitudinitatibus, seems to be commonly regarded as the longest, and it has the distinction of being used by Shakespeare.



    However, there's also this one with 28 letters:




    floccinaucinihilipilificatio,




    which is the action or habit of estimating something as worthless.



    Although the latter is longer by one letter, it was coined by students at Eton College as a humorous word. It can be broken down as follows:




    floccus (“a wisp”) +‎ naucum (“a trifle”) +‎ nihilum (“nothing”) +‎ pilus (“a hair”) + ficatio




    Given that floccinaucinihilipilificatio is of late coinage, I believe that honorificabilitudinitatibus is most likely the winner. Besides being used by Shakespeare, it wasn't coined by him. Rather, it appeared long before his day, such as in the following dictionary entry by Johannes Balbus in 1286:



    enter image description here







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Nov 22 '18 at 11:21

























    answered Nov 22 '18 at 10:10









    Expedito BipesExpedito Bipes

    2,0651312




    2,0651312








    • 2




      But wait.... the word you mention is an English word. Sure, it's composed of Latin terms, but it seems it's never been used in a Latin context. Maybe the one I mentioned hasn't been either!
      – luchonacho
      Nov 22 '18 at 11:02






    • 2




      Brilliant find, EB.
      – Hugh
      Nov 22 '18 at 15:08






    • 2




      To be more accurate, Shakespeare didn't use it, he mentioned it. Or, to put it another way, he used it not to express a meaning, but to put into the mouth of the character Costard in Love's Labour's Lost, for him to cite it as a very long word (again, not to express a meaning). The Balbus is, as you say, a dictionary entry, so he cites the word just to define it, not to use it. And where Balbus spells its -ibus form in full, is this merely to cite it as a very long (longissima) word? What's the longest attested Latin word used to express its meaning, not just cited for its length?
      – Rosie F
      Nov 22 '18 at 19:15






    • 1




      @RosieF. Either way, we agree that Shakespeare used it. I'm fine with that.
      – Expedito Bipes
      Nov 22 '18 at 19:30






    • 2




      @ExpeditoBipes Please don't misrepresent me. Read my earlier comment's first two sentences in full, rather than taking a few words from them out of context.
      – Rosie F
      Nov 22 '18 at 19:33














    • 2




      But wait.... the word you mention is an English word. Sure, it's composed of Latin terms, but it seems it's never been used in a Latin context. Maybe the one I mentioned hasn't been either!
      – luchonacho
      Nov 22 '18 at 11:02






    • 2




      Brilliant find, EB.
      – Hugh
      Nov 22 '18 at 15:08






    • 2




      To be more accurate, Shakespeare didn't use it, he mentioned it. Or, to put it another way, he used it not to express a meaning, but to put into the mouth of the character Costard in Love's Labour's Lost, for him to cite it as a very long word (again, not to express a meaning). The Balbus is, as you say, a dictionary entry, so he cites the word just to define it, not to use it. And where Balbus spells its -ibus form in full, is this merely to cite it as a very long (longissima) word? What's the longest attested Latin word used to express its meaning, not just cited for its length?
      – Rosie F
      Nov 22 '18 at 19:15






    • 1




      @RosieF. Either way, we agree that Shakespeare used it. I'm fine with that.
      – Expedito Bipes
      Nov 22 '18 at 19:30






    • 2




      @ExpeditoBipes Please don't misrepresent me. Read my earlier comment's first two sentences in full, rather than taking a few words from them out of context.
      – Rosie F
      Nov 22 '18 at 19:33








    2




    2




    But wait.... the word you mention is an English word. Sure, it's composed of Latin terms, but it seems it's never been used in a Latin context. Maybe the one I mentioned hasn't been either!
    – luchonacho
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:02




    But wait.... the word you mention is an English word. Sure, it's composed of Latin terms, but it seems it's never been used in a Latin context. Maybe the one I mentioned hasn't been either!
    – luchonacho
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:02




    2




    2




    Brilliant find, EB.
    – Hugh
    Nov 22 '18 at 15:08




    Brilliant find, EB.
    – Hugh
    Nov 22 '18 at 15:08




    2




    2




    To be more accurate, Shakespeare didn't use it, he mentioned it. Or, to put it another way, he used it not to express a meaning, but to put into the mouth of the character Costard in Love's Labour's Lost, for him to cite it as a very long word (again, not to express a meaning). The Balbus is, as you say, a dictionary entry, so he cites the word just to define it, not to use it. And where Balbus spells its -ibus form in full, is this merely to cite it as a very long (longissima) word? What's the longest attested Latin word used to express its meaning, not just cited for its length?
    – Rosie F
    Nov 22 '18 at 19:15




    To be more accurate, Shakespeare didn't use it, he mentioned it. Or, to put it another way, he used it not to express a meaning, but to put into the mouth of the character Costard in Love's Labour's Lost, for him to cite it as a very long word (again, not to express a meaning). The Balbus is, as you say, a dictionary entry, so he cites the word just to define it, not to use it. And where Balbus spells its -ibus form in full, is this merely to cite it as a very long (longissima) word? What's the longest attested Latin word used to express its meaning, not just cited for its length?
    – Rosie F
    Nov 22 '18 at 19:15




    1




    1




    @RosieF. Either way, we agree that Shakespeare used it. I'm fine with that.
    – Expedito Bipes
    Nov 22 '18 at 19:30




    @RosieF. Either way, we agree that Shakespeare used it. I'm fine with that.
    – Expedito Bipes
    Nov 22 '18 at 19:30




    2




    2




    @ExpeditoBipes Please don't misrepresent me. Read my earlier comment's first two sentences in full, rather than taking a few words from them out of context.
    – Rosie F
    Nov 22 '18 at 19:33




    @ExpeditoBipes Please don't misrepresent me. Read my earlier comment's first two sentences in full, rather than taking a few words from them out of context.
    – Rosie F
    Nov 22 '18 at 19:33











    2














    First of all, with all due respect, this word is not Classical Latin; it’s a Medieval Latin neologism (a nonce word) that was occasionally used solely because of its length.



    Secondly, honorificabilitudinitatibus is technically a word form, not a word (i.e. it’s not a lexeme).



    Afaik, it is first encountered in a treatise written by Peter of Pisa, an eighth century Italian grammarian, who, incidentally, taught Latin to Charlemagne.



    Here’s the screenshot:



    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer




























      2














      First of all, with all due respect, this word is not Classical Latin; it’s a Medieval Latin neologism (a nonce word) that was occasionally used solely because of its length.



      Secondly, honorificabilitudinitatibus is technically a word form, not a word (i.e. it’s not a lexeme).



      Afaik, it is first encountered in a treatise written by Peter of Pisa, an eighth century Italian grammarian, who, incidentally, taught Latin to Charlemagne.



      Here’s the screenshot:



      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer


























        2












        2








        2






        First of all, with all due respect, this word is not Classical Latin; it’s a Medieval Latin neologism (a nonce word) that was occasionally used solely because of its length.



        Secondly, honorificabilitudinitatibus is technically a word form, not a word (i.e. it’s not a lexeme).



        Afaik, it is first encountered in a treatise written by Peter of Pisa, an eighth century Italian grammarian, who, incidentally, taught Latin to Charlemagne.



        Here’s the screenshot:



        enter image description here






        share|improve this answer














        First of all, with all due respect, this word is not Classical Latin; it’s a Medieval Latin neologism (a nonce word) that was occasionally used solely because of its length.



        Secondly, honorificabilitudinitatibus is technically a word form, not a word (i.e. it’s not a lexeme).



        Afaik, it is first encountered in a treatise written by Peter of Pisa, an eighth century Italian grammarian, who, incidentally, taught Latin to Charlemagne.



        Here’s the screenshot:



        enter image description here







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Nov 23 '18 at 4:25

























        answered Nov 23 '18 at 4:07









        Alex B.Alex B.

        7,81911327




        7,81911327






























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