sordidior
Latin
Adjective
sordidior (comparative, neuter sordidius); third declension
- comparative degree of sordidus
- c. 4 BCE – 65 CE, Seneca the Younger, Epistulae Morales ad Lucilium 47.15:
- Errās, sī exīstimās mē quōsdam quasi sordidiōris operae reiectūrum — ut putā illum mūliōnem et illum bubulcum.
- (On the subject of inviting slaves to dine with the master.) You are mistaken, if you think that I am going to reject some [slaves], as it were, of a more humble class of work — for example, that mule driver and that ox driver.
- Errās, sī exīstimās mē quōsdam quasi sordidiōris operae reiectūrum — ut putā illum mūliōnem et illum bubulcum.
Declension
Third-declension comparative adjective.
| singular | plural | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| masc./fem. | neuter | masc./fem. | neuter | ||
| nominative | sordidior | sordidius | sordidiōrēs | sordidiōra | |
| genitive | sordidiōris | sordidiōrum | |||
| dative | sordidiōrī | sordidiōribus | |||
| accusative | sordidiōrem | sordidius | sordidiōrēs sordidiōrīs |
sordidiōra | |
| ablative | sordidiōre sordidiōrī |
sordidiōribus | |||
| vocative | sordidior | sordidius | sordidiōrēs | sordidiōra | |
Descendants
See sordidus.