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adventō, āvī, ātus, I, intens. n. (ad- | aedēs, is, f.; in the sing., a temple;

veniō), to come rapidly nearer; to approach, draw near, 5, 328; 6, 258. adventus, ūs, m. (advenio), a coming,

an arrival, 5, 36; advance, 11, 607. adversor, ātus sum, I, dep. freq. n. (advertō), to be against; to oppose, 4, 127.

adversus, a, um, p. of advertō. advertō, vertī, versus, 3, a., to turn to or toward; turn, direct, 6, 386; | turn against, bring before, 12, 555; of the mind, turn, direct, 8, 440; attend, observe, mark, listen, 2, 712; pass., come to, arrive at, 5, 34; P., adversus, a, um, turned toward or against; p., before, in front, opposite, 1, 166; opposing, 3, 38; against the wind, 12, 370; contrary, 2, 416; toward, to meet, 6, 684; subst., adversus, ī, m., an enemy, 9, 761; adversum, ī, n.; in adversum, opposite, 8, 237; pl., adversa, ōrum, n., misfortunes, accidents, 9, 172. advocō, āvī, ātus, I, a., to call; sum

mon, 5, 44.

advolō, āvī, ātus, I, n., to fly to, fly, 10, 511; hasten, run up, speed, 10, 896.

pl., a dwelling, palace, apartments, court, 2, 487, 512.

aedificō, āvī, ātus, I, a. (aedēs and faciō), to build; to construct, make, 2, 16. Aegaeōn, onis, m., Aegaean, a giant, also called Briareus, 10, 565. Aegaeus, a, um, adj., Aegaeon; per

taining to the Aegaeon, 3, 74. aeger, gra, grum, adj., indisposed; of the body, not well, suffering, sick, 5, 651; wounded, 10, 856; heavy, difficult, 5, 432; feeble, 9, 814; fainting, trembling, 5, 468; wearied, exhausted, 2, 566; of the mind, careworn, wretched, weary, sorrowladen, 2, 268; grieved, afflicted, desponding, oppressed, 1, 208; heartbroken, 1, 351; 4, 389; of inanimate things, sickly, 3, 142.

aegis, idis, f., the shield of Jupiter, carried also by Pallas; the aegis, 8, 354.

aegrēscō, 3, inc. n. (aegreō, to be sick), to become sick; grow worse, 12, 46. Aegyptius, a, um, adj. (Aegyptos), Egyptian, 8, 688.

Aegyptos (-tus), i, f., Egypt.

advolvō, volvī, volūtus, 3, a., to roll aemulus, a, um, adj., striving to equal;

to; roll, 6, 182.

adytum, ī, n., the inaccessible; the in

nermost part of a temple, accessible only to the priest; a shrine, sanctuary, oracle, 2, 115; the interior of a tomb, or shrine of the dead, 5, 84. Aeacidēs, ae, m., a son or descendant of Aeacus. 1. Achilles, as the grandson of Aeacus, 1, 99. 2. Pyrrhus, the son of Achilles, 3, 296. 3. Perseus, their descendant, king of Macedon, 6, 839.

Aeaeus, a, um, adj., of Aeaea, the

island of Circe; Aeaean or Colchian, 3, 386.

competing, rivaling, 5, 187; envious, 5, 415; a rival for, aspiring, 10, 371.

Aeneadēs, ae, m., a son of Aeneas; pl., Aeneadae, ārum, followers of Aeneas, the Trojans, 1, 565; Aeneadae, 3, 18.

Aenēās, ae, m. I. A Trojan chief, son of Venus and Anchises, and hero of the Aeneid, 1, 92. 2. Aenēās Silvius, one of the Alban kings, 6, 769. Aeneis, idis or idos, f. (Aenēās), the Aeneid.

Aenēius, a, um, adj. (id.), of Aeneas, 7, 1,

Aenīdēs, ae, m. (Aeneus, a collat. form of Aenēās), a son of Aeneus or Aeneas; Iulus, 9, 653. aēnus, a, um, adj. (aes), of bronze; brazen, 2, 470; subst., aēnum, ī, n., a bronze or brazen vessel; caldron, I, 213, et al.

Aeolia, ae, f., Aeolia, an island near

Sicily, the home of Aeolus, 1, 52. Aeolides, ae, m., a son or descendant

field, plain, 5, 456; low land, 12, 524. aequus, a, um, adj., plain, even; on a level with, leveled, with dat., 12, 569; equal, open, fair, 11, 706; equal, adequate, prepared, 10, 450; favorable, 1, 479; impartial, equitable, just, 6, 129; unprejudiced, unbiased, 9, 234; aequo pede, with foot to foot, face to face, 12, 465; aequum est, it is just, 12, 20; aequius fuerat, it would have been more just, II, 115; subst., aequum, ī, n., that which is even; right, justice, 2, 427; in aequum, to the open field, 9, 68.

of Aeolus. I. Ulysses, 6, 529. 2. Misenus, 6, 164. 3. Clytius, 9, 774. Aeolius, a, um, adj., pertaining to Aeolus; Aeolian, 5, 791. Aeolus, i, m., Aeolus. 1. The god who ruled over the winds, 1, 52. 2. A follower of Aeneas from Lyr-āēr, eris, m. (acc. āera or āerem), nesus, 12, 542. the air or atmosphere, 1, 300, et al. aequaevus, a, um, adj. (aequus and aerātus, a, um, adj. (aes), furnished

aevum), of equal age, 2, 561. aequalis, e, adj. (aequō), equal; of the same age, 10, 194; fellow, companion; subst., c., companion, 5, 468.

aeque, adv. (aequus), equally; alike. Aequïculus, a, um, adj. (Aequi), of the Aequi, a tribe adjacent to the Latins and Volscians, near Rome; Aequian, 7, 747.

Aequi Falisci, see Falisci. aequó, āvī, ātus, I, a. and n. (aequus),

to make equal in size, number, weight, etc., I, 193; 5, 419; to equalize, divide equally, 1, 508; make equal in length, 9, 338; in height, raise to, 4, 89; to equal, be equal to; to be as high as, on a level with; keep pace with, 6, 263; return equally, requite, 6, 474; lift, exalt, 11, 125; p., aequātus, a, um, made equal or even; steady, 4, 587. aequor, oris, n. (aequō), an equal, horizontal, or level surface; the surface of the sea; the sea, I, 146; water, 6, 355; wave, 3, 197; a level

with copper, bronze; made of bronze, 2, 481; bronze-covered; with brazen prow, 8, 675; armed with bronze; armed, 7, 703.

aereus, a, um, adj. (aes), made of copper or bronze; bronze, brazen (see def. of aes), 1, 448; brazen beaked, 5, 198; of the copper or bronze plates or scales of a corselet, 10, 313.

aeripēs, edis, adj. (aes and pēs), brazen- or bronze-footed, or hoofed, 6, 802.

āerius, a, um, adj., pertaining to the

air; airy, aërial, 5, 520; rising into the air; towering, lofty, 3, 291; air-cleaving, 9, 803.

aes, aeris, n., copper, bronze; brass, in one of the old English usages of that word, 1, 449, et al.; anything made of copper or bronze; a trumpet, 3, 240; cymbal; armor, 2, 734; shield, 2, 545; a bronze statue, 6, 847; a track or course of bronze plates, 6, 591; a ship's prow or beak, or a copper-bottomed ship, 1, 35;

pl., aera, n., money, 11, 329; aere | Aetõlus, a, um, adj., Aetolian, 11, 428; nexus, bronze-bound, of bronze, I, Aetōla urbs, Arpi in Apulia, built 448. by Diomedes, II, 239.

aestās, ātis, f., the summer, 1, 265, et | aevum, i, n., indefinite time; lapse of

al.; summer air, 6, 707; a year. aestivus, a, um, adj. (aestās), of summer; subst., aestiva, ōrum, n., a summer field; a flock.

aestuō, āvī, ātus, I, n. (aestus), to glow, to be dried up or parched; boil up; heave, foam, 6, 297; fume, 8, 258; rage, seethe, 12, 666.

aestus, ūs, m., glowing heat; summer; a boiling; a billowy motion; waves of flame, flames, 2, 706; wave, surge, 1, 107; tide, sea, flood, 3, 419; tide (of feeling), agitation, 4, 532.

aetās, atis, f. (for aevitãs, fr. aevum), lifetime, age, 1, 705; old age, 2, 596; period, generation, age, 7, 680; lapse of time; time, 8, 200. aeternus, a, um, adj. (for aeviternus), lusting, through ages; eternal; immortal, 1, 36; perpetual, 4, 99; adv., aeternum, for in aeternum, continually, eternally, 6, 401; for ever, 11, 98.

aethēr, eris, m. (acc. aethera and aetherem), the upper air; ether, sky, heaven, 1, 90; in a general sense, air, 1, 587, et al. aetherius, a, um, adj. (aether), pertaining to the upper air; ethereal, heavenly, 1, 394, et al.; airy, 8, 608.

Aethiops, opis, m., an Aethiopian. Aethōn, onis, m., Aethon, one of the

chariot horses of Pallas, 11, 89. aethra, ae, f., the cloudless air; serene

sky; heaven, 3, 585, et al. Aetna, ae f., a volcanic mountain on

the eastern coast of Sicily, 3, 579. Aetnaeus, a, um, adj. (Aetna), of Aetna Aetnaean, 3, 678.

time, time, 3, 415; age, 2, 638; old

age, 2, 509; life, 10, 582; immortality, 10, 235.

Afer, fra, frum, adj., African; subst.,

Āfrī, ōrum, m., Africans, 8, 724. 1. Africus, a, um, adj. (Afer), African,

4, 37.

2. Africus, i, m. (id.), the southwest wind.

aforem, āfuī, etc., see absum. Agamemnonius, a, um, adj., pertaining to Agamemnon; Agamemno· nian, Argive, Grecian, 4, 471. Agathyrsī, ōrum, m., a Sythian tribe dwelling on the river Maros in what is now Hungary, remarkable for the practice of tattooing their bodies, 4. 146.

age, see agō.

Agēnor, oris, m., a son of Neptune and Lyba, king of Phoenicia and ancestor of Dido, 1, 338.

ager, agrī, m., the land pertaining to a person or community; land under cultivation; a field, 2, 306, et al.; land, 1, 343, et al.

agger, eris, m. (aggerō), materials gathered to form an elevation; a heap of earth or stones, dike, embankment, bank, I, 112; 2, 496; heap of earth, 9, 567; top, summit, ridge. raised surface, 5, 44, 273; a rampart, 9, 769, et al.; a height or rising ground, 12, 446; aggerēs, mountains, mountain ramparts, 6, 830. I. aggerō, āvī, ātus, I, a. (agger), tc pile up; fig., increase, aggravate, 4, 197.

2. aggerō, gessī, gestus, 3, a. (ad and gerō), to bear to; heap upon, add to, 3, 63.

agglomerō, āvī, ātus, I, a. and n. (ad and glomero), to wind upon; to gather, assemble, crowd to, 2, 341; sē agglomerāre, to join themselves to, 12, 458.

aggredior, gressus sum, 3, dep. n. and a. (ad and gradior), attempt, dare, with inf., 2, 165; to advance toward; attempt, 3, 38; attack, 9, 325; assail, hew, 2, 463; accost, address, 3, 358.

aggressus, a, um, p. of aggredior. Āgis, idis, m., a Lycian, follower of Aeneas, 10, 751.

agitator, ōris, m. (agitō), one who drives; a charioteer, 2, 476. agitō, āvī, ātus, I, intens. a. and n. (ago), to put in motion; drive; drive away; drive, pursu, 2, 421; persecute, 6, 68; harass, haunt, 3, 331; stir up, arouse, 10, 71; hasten, 2, 640; move, animate, 6, 727; excite to, 9, 187; practice, exercise, 12, 397; spend, pass; pass., agitārī, to ride about, II, 694.

agmen, inis, n. (agō), that which is driven or moved; direction of movement; a train; gathering, winding; herd, flock, drove, 1, 186; an army, on the march; battalion, squadron, 5, 834; army, 11, 60; troop, band, 5, 549; company, multitude, throng, 5, 378; assemblage, gathering, flood; motion, stroke, of oars, 5, 211; stream, current, 2, 782; course, 2, 212; a leader, 10, 561.

agna, ae, f. (agnus), a ewe lamb, 5, 772. agnus, i, m., a lamb, 1, 635.

agō, ēgī, āctus, 3, a., to put in motion; to drive, 1, 333; force, impel, 3, 5; urge, incite, 7, 393; advance, 9, 505; move, turn, pursue, 10, 540; drive away, dispel, lead, 4, 546; send forth, raise, 6, 873; rear by

growth, 11, 136; work, 3, 695; work out, cut out, cleave, 10, 514; convey, 1, 391; bear onward, 3, 512; bring, 9, 18; do in general, 10, 675; do, perform, 5, 638; to be busy about, aim at, essay, try to accomplish, effect, gain, 11, 227; treat, 1, 574; derive, 12, 530; consider, discuss, debate, 11, 445; pass, spend, 5, 51; without an object, to be at work, to work, perform, 12,429; agere sẽ, to present one's self, appear, 6, 337; pass., agī, to move, hover, 12, 336; imperat., age, agite! onward! away! come on! agrestis, e, adj. (ager), pertaining to the fields or country; country-, rustic, rural, 3, 34; wild, 7, 111; subst., agrestis, is, m., a rustic, 7, 504; husbandman. agricola, ae, m. (ager and colō), one who cultivates the land; a husbandman, 2, 628. Agrippa, ae, m., Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, one of the confidential counselors of Augustus, and his principal military commander, 8, 682.

Agyllīnus, a, um, adj., of Agylla, a town in Etruria, afterwards called Caere, 7, 652; subst., Agyllini, ōrum, m., the people of Agylla, 12, 281.

āh, interj., ah!

Aiāx, ācis, m. 1. Ajax, the son of

Telamon. 2. Ajax, the son of Oileus, called also Ajax the Less, 1, 41; 2, 414.

āiō, 4, def., to speak; to say "yes"; say, I, 142, et al.; sometimes pleo

nastic after färī, etc., 5, 551. (If the i in this verb is followed by a consonant, the a is short; as aïs, aït; otherwise i coalesces with the following vowel; as aiō, pronounced ā-yō.)

āla, ae, f., a wing, 1, 301; the feather | alias, adv., see alius.

of an arrow, 9, 578; the wing of an army; cavalry, 11, 730; troop, battalion, II, 604; horsemen, mounted huntsmen, 4, 121. alacer (alacris, m., 5, 380), cris, cre, adj., lively; active, eager; bold, darting, exulting, 10, 729; joyful, 5, 380.

ālātus, a, um, adj. (āla), winged, 4, 259. Alba, ae, f., Alba or Alba Longa, a town on the Alban hills in Latium, from which Rome originated, 1, 271. Albānus, a, um, adj. (Alba), pertain- |

ing to Alba; Alban, 1, 7; subst., Albānī, ōrum, m., the Albans, 5, 600.

albeō, 2, n. (albus), to be white, 12, 36. albēscō, 3, inc. n. (albeō), to grow white, whiten; to brighten, dawn, 4, 586.

Albula, ae, f., the Albula, an ancient

name of the Tiber, 8, 332. Albunea, ae, f. (albus), Albunea, a fountain at Tibur; also personified as a nymph, 7, 83.

albus, a, um, adj., white, 3, 392; blank, undecorated, 9, 548; subst., album, ī, n., whiteness, white.

Alcander, dri, m., a Trojan, 9, 767.
Alcānor, oris, m. 1. Alcanor, a Tro-
jan hero, 9, 672. 2. A Rutulian,
10, 338.

Alcathous, i, m., a Trojan, 10, 747.
Alcīdēs, ae.,m., a aescendant of Alceus;
Hercules, 5, 414, et al.

Alcimedōn, ontis, m., a Greek wood

carver.

āles, itis (gen. pl. sometimes alituum, 8, 27), adj. (āla), winged, swift, 5, 861, et al.; subst. c., a bird, 1, 394; an owl, 12, 862.

Alētēs, is, m., a companion of Aeneas,

I, 121.

alga, ae, f., seaweed.

alibi, adv. (alius), elsewhere.
aliēnus, a, um, adj. (alius), pertaining
to another, another's; strange; for-
eign, 4, 311; intended for another,
10, 781; not one's own.
āliger, era, erum, adj. (āla and gerō),
wing-bearing; winged, 1, 663.

aliō, adv., see alius.

ālipēs, edis, adj. (āla and pēs), wingfooted, 12, 484; subst. m., wingfooted horse.

aliqua, see aliquis.

aliquandō, adv. (alius and quandō),
at some time; formerly, 8, 602; at
length, 8, 200.

aliqui, qua, quod, indef. adj. pron.
(alius and qui), some, any, in affirm-
ative sentences, 2, 48.
aliquid, see aliquis.

aliquis, quid, indef. subst. pron. (alius
and quis), some one, any one, some-
thing, anything, in affirmative sen-
tences; some one, 6, 864, et al.;
some other, 2, 48; acc., aliquid, as
to something, in some respect, some-
what, in some degree, 10, 84; adv.,
aliquā (sc. ratiōne or viā) (abl.),
in some way.

aliter, adv. (alius), in another man-
ner; otherwise, 1, 399.
ālituum, see āles.

alius, a, ud (gen. alīus, dat. alii), adj.
and subst., other, another; freq.,
repeated: alius — alius, one-an-
other; pl., alii alii, some — others,

I, 427, 428; used once for aliialii, 4, 593; adv., aliō (old abl.), elsewhere, to another place; aliās (acc. pl. fem., sc. vices), at another time.

Allēctō, ūs, f., Alecto, one of the furies, 7, 324, et al.

Allia, ae, f., the Allia, a small stream

running into the Tiber, eleven

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