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locûtus

Locûtus is a term that appears in various linguistic and cultural contexts. In classical Latin, the standard form is locutus, the perfect passive participle of loquor, meaning “having spoken” or “spoken.” The variant locûtus, with a circumflex over the u, is a stylized spelling found in some linguistic texts or constructed languages to indicate vowel length or emphasis; it is not part of canonical Latin orthography.

In Latin usage, locutus is used in phrases such as locutus sum (“I have spoken”) and locutus

In popular culture, Locutus of Borg is the assimilation-altered persona of Captain Jean-Luc Picard in Star Trek:

Outside Latin and Star Trek, locûtus may appear in fictional or experimental contexts as a proper name

est
(“he
has
spoken”).
The
participle
functions
as
a
descriptor
of
action
related
to
speech
and
can
be
combined
with
esse
to
form
compound
tenses
or
used
adjectivally
in
glossaries
and
early
modern
writings.
The
Next
Generation;
the
name
is
derived
from
the
Latin
root
loquor
and
is
presented
as
a
title
reflecting
speech
on
behalf
of
the
Borg
collective.
The
canonical
spelling
in
the
series
is
Locutus,
with
a
capital
L.
or
as
an
adjective
meaning
“spoken”
or
“speech-related.”
It
has
no
standardized
meaning
beyond
these
domains,
and
standard
Latin
uses
retain
locutus
without
diacritics.