LOGOI

The corpus record — Latin

cacumen

cacumen · n

the extreme end

Generated live from the audited Latin corpus — every figure on this page is a database query, not prose from memory.

Where it lives

  • Ordo Urbium Nobilium 1 · 9.56/10k
  • Culex, Appendix Vergiliana 2 · 7.65/10k
  • Eclogues 3 · 6.61/10k
  • Res Rustica, Books I-IX 43 · 5.46/10k
  • Panegyricus dictus Manlio Theodoro consuli 1 · 4.65/10k
  • de raptu Proserpinae 3 · 4.3/10k
  • Epodon 1 · 3.33/10k
  • Mosella 1 · 3.08/10k
  • Metamorphoses 23 · 2.96/10k
  • Naturalis Historia 117 · 2.95/10k
  • De consolatione philosophiae 7 · 2.85/10k
  • Cathemerina 2 · 2.72/10k

Densest 12 of 55 attested works shown, by occurrences per 10,000 attested tokens.

What it meant

1. căcūmen — Lewis & Short

căcūmen, ĭnis, n.etym. dub.,

I the extreme end, extremity, or point of a thing; the peak, top, utmost point.
I Lit. (whether horizontal or perpendicular; while culmen is an extremity projecting in height; v. Doed. Syn.; in the poets freq.; in prose rare before the Aug. per.; not in Cic.): ut altis Arboribus vicina cacumina summa terantur Inter se, the extreme top, Lucr. 1, 898. —So of tree-tops: umbrosa cacumina, Verg. E. 2, 3: fracta, id. ib. 9, 9; 6, 28; id. G. 2, 29; 2, 307; Ov. M. 1, 346; 1, 552; 1, 567; 8, 257; 8, 716; 8, 756; 9, 389; 10, 140; 10, 193; 13, 833; 15, 396; Quint. 8, 3, 10; 1, 2, 26: arborum cacumina, Plin. 10, 53, 74, § 147: ficorum, pirorum, malorum, Col. 3, 21, 11: olivae, id. 5, 11, 14 and 15; 11, 3, 37; Pall. Jan. 15, 15; id. Febr. 25, 28; id. Mart. 10, 23; 10, 35; id. Apr. 4, 1; Veg. 4, 4, 9 al.: harundinis, Plin. 16, 36, 64, § 158.—Of grass, the points of the blades, Ov. Tr. 3, 12, 12: praeacutis (ramorum) cacuminibus, Caes. B. G. 7, 73; Lucr. 6, 459.— Of the summits, peaks of mountains, Liv. 7, 34, 4; Lucr. 6, 464; Cat. 64, 240; Verg. A. 3, 274; Hor. Epod. 16, 28; Ov. M. 1, 310; 1, 317; 1, 666; 6, 311; 8, 797; 7, 804; 9, 93; Luc. 7, 75, Plin. 3, 16, 20, § 117; 6, 7, 7, § 20 al.—Of other things: pilorum, Auct. B. Afr. 47: atomi, Lucr. 1, 600: cujusque rei, id. 1, 750: ovi, Plin. 10, 52, 74, § 145; 10. 54, 75, § 151: metae, id. 36, 5, 4, § 31: pyramidis, id. 36, 12, 17, § 79: membrorum, id. 11, 37. 88, § 219: ignis, Luc. 1, 551: incurvum, of the elephant's back, Sil. 9, 584.—
II Trop.
A The end, limit: donec alescundi summum tetigere cacumen, until they have completely attained the limit of their growth, Lucr. 2, 1130: ad summum donec venere cacumen, to the height of perfection, id. 5, 1456: famae, Laber. ap. Macr. S. 2, 7.—
B As a gram. t. t., the mark of accent placed over a letter, Mart. Cap. 3, § 273.

2. cacümen — Walde–Hofmann

cacümen, -inis n. „Spitze, Gipfel“ (seit Cato, davon cacümindre „zuspitzen* seit Ov.): vgl. ai. kakübh- f. ,Gipfel*, kakıd- „Gipfel, Kuppe’, küküd- „Mundhöhle, Gaumen“ (Grdbd. „Wölbung‘), kakubháh ,emporragend*, kaküdmant- „mit einem Gipfel oder Höckerversehen‘. *ga-qu-d- redupl. Dental-Erw. von *geu „biegen“ (s. auch, cüpa, cubö, cubitus, cumulus). Lat. cacümen wohl Erw. von *kakud nach acümen (Thurneysen Thes., … — [Walde–Hofmann, s.v. cacümen, p. 159]

In the wild

6 of 329 attestations shown.

Where it came from

  • Walde-Hofmann, Lateinisches etymologisches Worterbuch Treated in Walde-Hofmann, Lateinisches etymologisches Worterbuch s.v. cacümen (scan p. 159; entry #482).

Latin text and lemmatization derived from the Perseus Digital Library (canonical-latinLit), CC BY-SA 4.0. Lewis & Short (public domain) via Perseus. This derived data is shared under the same CC BY-SA 4.0 license.