Gothi, and Gotthi, People, of whom the sirst came out of Gutlande, vnto whome resorted a greate mnltitude of other people, as wel out of the countreys nowe called Prussia.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
Gŏthi, ōrum, m., = *go/qoi, the Goths, the great tribe of Northern Germany: huc possem victos inde referre Gŏthos, Aus. Epigr. 3 fin.; Inscr. Orell. 1135; 1159; and scanned Gōthi, id. ib. 1162 (of the year A. D. 565). Usually regarded as the same tribe, called, at an earlier period, Gŏthō-nes or Gŏtōnes, Tac. A. 2, 62; and, Gŭtōnes, Plin. 4, 14, 28, 99; 37, 2, 11, 35; but these were more probably the Getae, i. e. the Prussians and Lithuanians; cf. Holzmann ad Tac. G. p. 260 sq.—II. Derivv.: A. Gŏthĭa, ae, f., the country of the Goths, Amm. 30, 2.—B. Gŏ-thĭcus, a, um, adj., of or belonging to the Goths, Gothic: bellum, Trebell. XXX. Tyrann. 30.—Gothicus, i, m., a surname bestowed on the conqueror of the Goths, Inscr. Grut. 276, 4; Num. ap. Eckh. D. N. V. 7, p. 472.