Hobbius
Latin
    
    Proper noun
    
Hobbius m sg (genitive Hobbiī); second declension
- (New Latin) Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679), English philosopher
-  1674, Friedrich Gesen, Domini Samuelis Pufendorfii […] contra jus naturae iniquitas inque illius scrutinio infelicitas […], page 57:- […] videbit quam primo statim dogmate p 3, seqq. in Hobbio hoc opinionis monstrum; nihil ex se & simpliciter malum Bonumve esse, tam feliciter prostraverit.- […] he shall see, forthwith and before all else, on p. 3 sqq. how fortunately he has, by means of doctrine, overthrown this monstrosity of an opinion in Hobbes, that nothing is simply and in itself bad or good.
 
 
-  1683, Richard Cumberland, De legibus naturae disquisitio philosophica […], page 54:- Hobbio autem indecorum erat maximè hac in re, vel hoc in loco labi: cùm quia status civilis peculiare privilegium, cuilibet in statu naturali tribuere turpe fuit, etiam tum cùm statuum hujusmodi discrimina accuratissimè tradere præ se fert; […]- But it was especially shameful for Hobbes to err in this matter, or in this place; for it is disgraceful for him to accord to anyone in the state of nature a peculiar privilege of civil society precisely where he pretends to discuss with the greatest accuracy the differences between these states […]
 
 
 
-  
Declension
    
Second-declension noun, singular only.
| Case | Singular | 
|---|---|
| Nominative | Hobbius | 
| Genitive | Hobbiī | 
| Dative | Hobbiō | 
| Accusative | Hobbium | 
| Ablative | Hobbiō | 
| Vocative | Hobbī | 
    This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.