cancrum

Latin

Noun

cancrum

  1. accusative singular of cancer

Etymology 2

From cancer (crab; cancer). The use of cancrum as a neuter nominative/accusative form may derive from a misunderstanding of the gender of the masculine accusative singular form cancrum. The term "cancrum oris" first appears in print in Observationes medicae de affectibus omissis (1649) by Arnoldus Boot as a translation of English "mouth canker" in a grammatical context that calls for an accusative singular, and so the form is ambiguous in this source as to the gender of the word.[1] The hypothesis that the name cancrum oris originated in such a blunder is put forth by B. H. Coates (1826),[2] who suggests the error first appeared in John Pearson's Principles of Surgery (1788, London, Chapter 13, Section 1 "Of the Canker of the Mouth", from page 262).[3]

Noun

cancrum n (genitive cancrī); second declension

  1. (medicine) canker[4]
    • 1649, Arnold Boate, Observationes medicae de affectibus omissis , (page 26):
      quando epidemice haec labes saevit ob quas causas Anglicum vulgus eam Mouth Canker, aut Canker of the Mouth, id est Cancrum Oris appellat: quod nomen de aliis quoque ulcerosis ac malignis Oris affectibus usurpat.
Inflection

Second-declension noun (neuter).

Case Singular Plural
Nominative cancrum cancra
Genitive cancrī cancrōrum
Dative cancrō cancrīs
Accusative cancrum cancra
Ablative cancrō cancrīs
Vocative cancrum cancra
Derived terms

References

  1. K.W. Marck (2003) "Cancrum oris and noma: some etymological and historical remarks", British Journal of Plastic Surgery 56(6):524-7
  2. Marck, page 525
  3. B. H. Coates (1826) "Description of the Gangrenous Ulcer of the Mouths of Children", North American Medical and Surgical Journal, Vol. 2, No. 3, July, 1826
  4. Frederick Ransom Campbell (1888) The Language of Medicine: A Manual Giving the Origin, Etymology, Pronunciation and Meaning of the Technical Terms found in Medical Literature, New York. D. Appleton and Company. page 129
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