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EPICOENE

Volume 6 · 86 words · 1797 Edition

in grammar, a term applied to nouns, Epicurus, which, under the same gender and termination, mark indifferently the male and female species. Such in Latin is aquila, welpertho, &c., which signify equally a male or female eagle or bat.

Grammarians distinguish between epicene and common. A noun is said to be common of two kinds, when it may be joined either with a masculine or a feminine article; and epicene, when it is always joined to some of the two articles, and yet signifies both genders.