flator

See also: flätor

Latin

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

From flō (blow) + -tor (agentive noun suffix), i.e. “blower”.

Noun

flātor m (genitive flātōris); third declension

  1. flautist
    Synonym: tībīcen
  2. caster (of metal), coiner
    • c. 2nd century CE, Sextus Pomponius, quoted in Digest 1.2.2.30:
      Constituti sunt eodem tempore et quattuorviri qui curam viarum agerent, et triumviri monetales aeris argenti auri flatores []
      At the same time there were also established the quattuorviri who are to take care of the roads, and the triumviri monetales, those who cast copper, silver, and gold []
  3. (Medieval Latin) bellows-worker
    • 1333, P.R.O. Ministers’ Accounts; republished as “Some Fourteenth-Century Accounts of Ironworks at Tudeley, Kent”, in Archaeologia, or, Miscellaneous tracts relating to antiquity, volume 63, 1913, page 157:
      In mercede anteriorum flatorum []
      In recompense of the principal bellows-workers []
  4. (New Latin, generally) blower, that which blows
    • 1671, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Hypothesis Physica nova [] ; republished as C. I. Gerhardt, editor, Leibnizes mathematische Schriften, volume 2, 1860, page 24:
      [] denique ventorum flatorum, caeterorumque aquae aërisque motuum ordinariorum phaenomena non difficulter deducuntur.
      [] and lastly the phenomena of those things that blow the winds, and otherwise of the regular movements of water and air, are not difficult to deduce.
Usage notes

The general sense of “blower” is etymologically transparent, and likely to have been used in Classical times, but is only directly attested in New Latin.

Inflection

Lua error in Module:utilities at line 142: attempt to perform arithmetic on local 'h' (a nil value)

Descendants
  • Vulgar Latin: *flātor (odour, that which blows)
    • Italian: fiatore
    • Old French: flaour (smell, odour)

Verb

flātor

  1. second/third-person singular future passive imperative of flō

References

Swedish

Noun

flator

  1. indefinite plural of flata
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.