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abundans

Abundans is a Latin term functioning as the present participle of abundare, meaning to abound or to overflow. As an adjective, abundans translates as “abounding” or “abundant” and is used in Latin texts to describe quantities, fullness, or plenitude. The abstract idea of abundance is more commonly expressed with the noun abundantia, while abundans emphasizes the quality of being abundant.

Grammatical use and form: Abundans agrees with the noun it modifies in gender, number, and case, typically

Modern and scholarly context: In contemporary discussions, abundans is mainly of interest to students of Latin

See also: abundare, abundantia, abundance, abundant.

appearing
in
the
masculine
nominative
singular
in
literary
contexts.
It
serves
a
descriptive
role,
attributing
the
characteristic
of
abundance
to
subjects
rather
than
signaling
a
bare
quantity
on
its
own.
In
Latin
literature
and
inscriptions,
abundans
may
appear
in
phrases
that
depict
things
as
plentiful
or
overflowing,
depending
on
surrounding
syntax.
grammar
and
historical
linguistics
as
the
participial
form
from
abundare.
It
is
rarely
needed
as
an
everyday
English
term,
but
appears
in
linguistic
analyses,
glossaries
of
Latin
participles,
and
in
discussions
of
how
Latin
expresses
fullness
and
plenitude.
When
encountered
in
translations,
abundans
is
typically
rendered
as
“abounding”
or,
more
idiomatically,
“abundant.”