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Porcine - a noun?
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Are words like porcine and hircine nouns as well as adjectives? I was wondering because feline and canine are both.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's a sex thing, Jno! Strictly-speaking, 'capriciousness' is related to capra = a female goat, whilst 'hircosity' is related to 'hircus' = a male goat. It figures, given that capricious behaviour is more often associated with female attitudes. (That's not sexist, ladies, it just is more frequently thus associated in common usage.)
good point QM. Presumably because goats are no longer kept by many English-speakers, the language doesn't distinguish between the sexes (unlike dog, horse, cow)... unless goatess is a word among countryfolk.
I understand there is a female British celebrity by the name of Caprice, but know nothing of her behaviour patterns.
Narolines, when I said earlier that "both words" are "purely adjectives", I was referring to porcine and hircine - the actual words in question - and not to feline and canine. The latter two are quite clearly indicated in Chambers and TOED as nouns as well as adjectives. Of course, the adjectival form predated the noun form. Given the rarity of the other two words, I cannot imagine anyone using either as a noun except in a jocular fashion such as I suggested earlier. Cheers
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