Metadata
Setting of examples | |
Language | Latin |
Region | Ancient Rome |
Date | 4th century b.C. - 3rd century A.D. |
Persons involved | |
Compilation | Solari Jarque, Nicolás (2019-2020) |
Annotation | Solari Jarque, Nicolás (2020-2021) |
Annotation | |
Types of examples | Prepositional phrases |
Annotated Categories |
|
Sources | |
texts from Thesaurus Linguae Latinae, see sources | |
Related Publication | |
Solari Jarque, Nicolás (in preparation): Las Formaciones Adverbiales con Preposición y Adjetivo (tipos de pleno, in serium) en Latín. PhD Thesis at the Universidad de Alcalá, Alcalá de Henares (Madrid). | |
Corpus Description | |
This corpus contains around 3.500 annotated examples of PA patterns which have an adjectival phraseme core, such as in primis or ex aequo. Approximately 200 different adjectival lemmata are registered, as shown in the List of Lemmata, which includes a count of examples per lemma. These examples were found within the Latin literature from the 4th century b.C. to the 3rd century A.D., hence covering Early Latin (4th–2nd century b.C.), Classical Latin (1st century b.C.) and Imperial Latin (1st–4th century A.D.), except Christian authors, whose language was strongly influenced by biblical texts and, therefore, by Hebrew and Greek. The compilation of the prepositional phrases was made after parsing and analysing one-by-one the classical texts referred in the index of the Thesaurus Linguae Latinae and according to the little information that can be found regarding this topic in some grammars and stylistic Latin manuals such as the ones written by Ferdinand Hand (after the work of Tursellinus), Hoffmann-Szantyr or Lisardo Rubio, among others. Additionally, this database offers a glossary which contains the translation into English of the phraseme, the adjective involved and its etymology, which has been taken from the Etymological dictionary of Latin and the other Italic languages by M. de Vaan.The bibliography (see sources) was complemented by the counting of words per author, summing up the total of words which were parsed (ca. 5,4 million words). This table includes also authors who do not appear in the corpus because no instance of PA was found in their texts. | |
Extent | |
Tagged examples of adverbs | 3568 |
Types of adjective - lemmata | 137 |
All words | 52506 |
Date | 2020 |
Suggested Citation | |
Solari Jarque, Nicolás (2021): Corpus of Latin Prepositional Adverbials with Adjectival Core. In: Schneider, Gerlinde / Pollin, Christopher / Gerhalter, Katharina & Hummel, Martin: Adjective-Adverb Interfaces in Romance. Open-Access Database (=AAIF-Database). https://gams.unigraz.at/o:aaif.ltpaaif. |
Source
ID | Author | Title | Type | Date | Editor | Publisher | Publishing Place | Edition | Region |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Acc.trag. | Lucius Accius | Tragoediarum fragmenta | Drama | Early | Ribbeck, O. | Teubner | Leipzig | Scaenicae Romanorum Poesis Fragmenta Vol. 1, 1898 | Ancient Rome |
Aetna. | Aetna, carmen apendicis Vergilianae | Poetry | Imperial | Goodyear, F. R. D. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | Appendix Vergiliana, 1966 | Ancient Rome | |
Afran.tog. | Lucius Afranius | Comoediarum fragmenta | Drama | Early | Ribbeck, O. | Teubner | Leipzig | Scaenicae Romanorum Poesis Fragmenta, 1898 | Ancient Rome |
Ampel. | Lucius Ampelius | Liber Memoralis | Prose | imperial | Assmann, E. | Teubner | Leipzig | Lucii Ampelii Liber Memoralis, 1935 | Ancient Rome |
Apic. | Apicius | De re coquinaria | Prose | Imperial | Milham, M. E. | Teubner | Leipzig | De re coquinaria, 1969 | Ancient Rome |
Apul.apol. | Apuleius Madaurus Afer | Apologia | Prose | Imperial | Helm, R. | Teubner | Leipzig | Apulei Platonici Madaurensis Opera Quae Supersunt., 1959 | Ancient Rome |
Apul.flor. | Apuleius Madaurus Afer | Florida | Prose | Imperial | Helm, R. | Teubner | Leipzig | Apulei Platonici Madaurensis Opera Quae Supersunt., 1959 | Ancient Rome |
Apul.met. | Apuleius Madaurus Afer | Metamorphoses (Asinus Aureus) | Prose | Imperial | Robertson, D. S.; Vallette, P. | Belles Lettres | Paris | Apulée: Les Métamorphoses., 1940-1946 | Ancient Rome |
Apul.mund. | Apuleius Madaurus Afer | De mundo | Prose | Imperial | Beaujeau, J. | Belles Lettres | Paris | Apulée: Opuscules Philosophiques, 1973 | Ancient Rome |
Apul.Plat. | Apuleius Madaurus Afer | De Platonis et euius dogmate | Prose | Imperial | Beaujeau, J. | Belles Lettres | Paris | Apulée: Opuscules Philosophiques, 1973 | Ancient Rome |
Apul.Socr. | Apuleius Madaurus Afer | De deo Socratis | Prose | Imperial | Beaujeau, J. | Belles Lettres | Paris | Apulée: Opuscules Philosophiques, 1973 | Ancient Rome |
Caecil.com. | Caecilius Statius Insuber Gallus | Comoediarum fragmenta | Drama | Early | Ribbeck, O. | Teubner | Leipzig | Scaenicae Romanorum Poesis Fragmenta Vol. 1, 1898 | Ancient Rome |
Caes.Civ. | Caius Iulius Caesar | Comentarii belli civilis | Prose | Classical | Klotz, A. | Teubner | Leipzig | C. Iulii Caesaris commentarii, 1950 | Ancient Rome |
Caes.Gall. | Caius Iulius Caesar | Comentarii belli Gallici | Prose | Classical | Seel, O. | Teubner | Leipzig | C. Iulii Caesaris: Commentarii Rerum Gestarum, 1961 | Ancient Rome |
Cato.agr. | Marcus Porcius Cato Censorinus | De agri cultura | Prose | Classical | Speranza, F. | Università di Messina | Messina | Scriptorum Romanorum De Re Rustica Reliquiae Vol. 1, 1974 | Ancient Rome |
Cato.orat. | Marcus Porcius Cato Censorinus | Orationum fragmenta | Prose | Classical | Malcovati, E. | Paravia | Turin | Oratorum Romanorum Fragmenta Liberae Rei Publicae, 1930 | Ancient Rome |
Catul. | Caius Valerius Catullus | Carmina | Poetry | Classical | Mynors, R. A. B. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | C. Valerii Catulli carmina, 1958 | Ancient Rome |
Cels. | Aulus Cornelius Celsus | De medicina | Prose | Imperial | Marx, F. | Teubner | Leipzig | Corpus Medicorum Latinorum Vol. 1, 1915 | Ancient Rome |
Cens. | Censorinus | De die natali | Prose | Imperial | Jahn, O. | Rodopi | Amsterdam | Censorini de Die Natali Liber, 1964 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.ac. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Academica | Prose | Classical | Plasberg, O. | Teubner | Stuttgart | M. Tulli Ciceronis Scripta quae Manserunt Omnia fasc. 42, 1992 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Arat. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Aratea | Prose | Classical | Soubiran, J. | Belles Lettres | Paris | Atarea Fragments poétiques, 1972 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Arch. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro A. Licinio Archia Poeta Oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 6, 1911 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Att. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Epistulae ad Atticum | Prose | Classical | Shakelton Bailey, D. R. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | Cicero's Letters to Atticus, 1965-1968 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Brut. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Brutus | Prose | Classical | Malcovati, E. | Teubner | Stuttgart | M. Tulli Ciceronis Scripta quae Manserunt Omnia fasc. 4, 1992 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.adBrut. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Epistulae ad Brutum | Prose | Classical | Shakelton Bailey, D. R. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | Cicero: Epistulae ad Quintum Fratrem et M. Brutum, 1980 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Caecin. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro A. Caecina Oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 4, 1909 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Cael. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro M. Caelio Rufo Oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 1, 1905 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.catil. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | In L. Sergium Catilinam Orationes | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 1, 1905 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Cato. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Cato maior de senectute | Prose | Classical | Simbeck, K. | Teubner | Stuttgart | M. Tulli Ciceronis Scripta quae Manserunt Omnia fasc. 47, 1917 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Cluent. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro A. Cluentio Habito oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 1, 1905 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Deiot. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro rege Deiotaro oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 2, 1918 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.div. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | De divinatione | Prose | Classical | Mueller, C. F. W. | Teubner | Leipzig | M. Tulli Ciceronis Scripta Quae Manserunt Omnia Part. 4, Vol. 2, 1890 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.divInCaec. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | in Q. Caecilium Nigrum oratio quae divinatio dicitur | Prose | Classical | Peterson, W. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 3, 1917 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.dom. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | De domo sua ad pontifices oratio | Prose | Classical | Peterson, W. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 5, 1911 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.fam. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Epistulae ad familiares | Prose | Classical | Shakelton Bailey, D. R. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | Cicero: Epistulae ad Familiares, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.fat. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | De fato | Prose | Classical | Mueller, C. F. W. | Teubner | Leipzig | M. Tulli Ciceronis Scripta Quae Manserunt Omnia Part. 4, Vol. 2, 1890 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.fin. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | De finibus bonorum et malorum | Prose | Classical | Schiche, T. | Teubner | Leipzig | M. Tulli Ciceronis Scripta Quae Manserunt Omnia fasc. 43, 1915 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Flacc. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro L Valerio Flacco oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 4, 1909 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Font. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro M. Fonteio orationes quae extant | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 6, 1911 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Har.Resp. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | De haruspicum responso oratio | Prose | Classical | Peterson, W. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 5, 1911 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.inv. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Rhetorici libri qui vocantur de inventione | Prose | Classical | Stroebel, E. | Teubner | Leipzig | M. Tulli Ciceronis Scripta Quae Manserunt Omnia fasc. 2, 1915 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Lael. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Laelius de amicitia | Prose | Classical | Mueller, C. F. W. | Teubner | Leipzig | M. Tulli Ciceronis Scripta Quae Manserunt Omnia Part 4, Vol. 3, 1890 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.leg. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Librorum de legibus quae exstant | Prose | Classical | de Plinval, G. | Belles Lettres | Paris | Traité des Lois, 1968 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.LegAgr. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | De lege agraria orationum quae exstant | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 4, 1909 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Lig. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro Q. Ligario oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 2, 1918 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Manil. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro lege Manilia (de imperio Cn. Pompei) oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 1, 1905 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Marcell. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro M. Claudio Marcello oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 2, 1918 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Mil. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro T. Annio Milone oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 2, 1918 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Mur. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro L. Licinio Murena oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 1, 1905 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.NatDeor. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | De natura deorum | Prose | Classical | Ax, W. | Teubner | Leipzig | M. Tulli Ciceronis Scripta Quae Manserunt Omnia fasc. 45, 1933 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.off. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | De officiis | Prose | Classical | Atzert, C. | Teubner | Leipzig | M. Tulli Ciceronis Scripta Quae Manserunt Omnia fasc. 48, 1932 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.orat. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Orator (ad M. Brutum) | Prose | Classical | Reis, P. | Teubner | Leipzig | M. Tulli Ciceronis Scripta Quae Manserunt Omnia fasc. 5, 1932 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.deOrat. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | De oratore | Prose | Classical | Wilkins, A. S. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Rhetorica Vol. 1, 1955 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.parad. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Paradoxa stoicorum | Prose | Classical | Mueller, C. F. W. | Teubner | Leipzig | M. Tulli Ciceronis Scripta Quae Manserunt Omnia part 4, Vol. 3, 1890 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.part. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Partitiones oratoriae | Prose | Classical | Rackham, H. | Loeb Classical Library | Cambridge | Cicero in Twenty-Eight Volumes Vol. 4, 1942 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Phil. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | In M. Antonium orationes Philippicae | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 2, 1918 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Pis. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | In L. Calpurnium Pisonem oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 4, 1909 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Planc. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro Cn. Plancio oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 6, 1911 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.prov. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | De provinciis consularibus oratio | Prose | Classical | Peterson, W. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 5, 1911 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.AdQFr. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Epistulae ad Quintum Fratrem | Prose | Classical | Shakelton Bailey, D. R. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | Cicero: Epistulae ad Quintum Fratrem et M. Brutum, 1980 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.QRosc. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro Q. Roscio Gallo Comoedo oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 4, 1909 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Quinct. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro C. Quinctio oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 4, 1909 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.RabPerd. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro C. Rabirio perduellionis reo orationis quae exstant | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 4, 1909 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.RabPost. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Por C. Rabirio Postumo oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 4, 1909 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.PRedAdQuir. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Post reditum ad quirites | Prose | Classical | Peterson, W. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 5, 1911 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.PRedInSen. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Post reditum in senatu | Prose | Classical | Peterson, W. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 5, 1911 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.rep. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Librorum de re publica quae exstant | Prose | Classical | Mueller, C. F. W. | Teubner | Leipzig | M. Tulli Ciceronis Scripta Quae Manserunt Omnia part 4, Vol. 2, 1890 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Sest. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro P. Sestio oratio | Prose | Classical | Peterson, W. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 5, 1911 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.SRosc. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro Sex. Roscio Amerino oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 1, 1905 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Sull. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Pro P. Cornelio Sulla oratio | Prose | Classical | Clarck, A. C. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 6, 1911 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Tim. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Timaei Platonici versionis fragmenta | Prose | Classical | Mueller, C. F. W. | Teubner | Leipzig | M. Tulli Ciceronis Scripta Quae Manserunt Omnia part 4, Vol. 3, 1890 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.top. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Topica | Prose | Classical | Hubbell, H. M. | Loeb Classical Library | Cambridge | De Inventione, De Optimo Genere Oratorum, Topica, 1949 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Tusc. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | Tusculanae disputationes | Prose | Classical | Pohlenz, M. | teubner | Leipzig | M. Tulli Ciceronis Scripta Quae Manserunt Omnia fasc. 44, 1918 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Vatin. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | In P. Vatinium testem interrogatio | Prose | Classical | Peterson, W. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 5, 1911 | Ancient Rome |
Cic.Verr. | Marcus Tullius Cicero | In C. Verrem orationes sex | Prose | Classical | Peterson, W. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes Vol. 3, 1917 | Ancient Rome |
Colum.arb. | L. Iunius Columella | Poetry | Imperial | Rodgers, R. H. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | L. Iuni Moderati Columellae Res rustica. : Incerti auctoris Liber de arboribus, 2010 | Ancient Rome | |
Colum. | L. Iunius Columella | Res rusticae | Prose | Imperial | Rodgers, R. H. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | L. Iuni Moderati Columellae Res rustica. : Incerti auctoris Liber de arboribus, 2010 | Ancient Rome |
Curt. | Q. Curtius Rufus | Historiae Alexandri Magni | Prose | Imperial | Rolfe, J. C. | Loeb Classical Library | Cambridge | History of Alexander, 1946 | Ancient Rome |
Enn.ann. | Ennius | Annales | Poetry | Early | Skutsch, O. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | The Annals of Q. Ennius, 1985 | Ancient Rome |
Enn.com. | Ennius | Comoediarum fragmenta | Drama | Early | Ribbeck, O. | Teubner | Leipzig | Scaenicae Romanorum Poesis Fragmenta Vol. 1, 1898 | Ancient Rome |
Enn.trag. | Ennius | Tragoediarum fragmenta | Drama | Early | Jocelyn, H. D. | Cambridge classical texts | Cambridge | Ennius, The Tragedies: the fragments, 1967 | Ancient Rome |
EpicedDrusi. | Epicedion Drusi | Poetry | Imperial | Mozley, J. H. | Loeb Classical Library | Cambridge | Ovid in Six Volumes Vol. 2, 1979 | Ancient Rome | |
Fest. | Sex. Pompeius Festus | Epitomae operis de verborum significatu | Prose | Imperial | Lindsey, W. M. | Teubner | Leipzig | Sexti Pompei Festi De Verborum Significatu Quae Supersunt cum Pauli Epitome, 1913 | Ancient Rome |
Flor.epit. | Florus | Epitoma de Tito Livio | Prose | Imperial | Malcovati, H. | Librería dello Stato | Rome | L. Annaei Flori quae exstant, 1938 | Ancient Rome |
Frontin.aq. | Sextus Iulius Frontinus | De aquaeductu urbis Romae comentarius | Prose | Imperial | Kunderewicz, C. | Teubner | Leipzig | Sex. Iulii Frontini De Aquaeductu Urbis Romae, 1973 | Ancient Rome |
Frontin.grom. | Excerpta e Frontini opere quodam gromatico | Prose | Imperial | Thulin, C. | Teubner | Leipzig | Corpus Agrimensorum Latinorum Vol. 1, 1971 | Ancient Rome | |
Frontin.strat. | Sextus Iulius Frontinus | Strategemata | Prose | Imperial | Bendz, G. | Akademie Verlag | Berlin | Frontin Krieglisten, 1987 | Ancient Rome |
Fronto.AdMCaes. | M. Cornelius Fronto Cirtensis | Epistula ad M. Caesarem et invicem | Prose | Imperial | Van den Hout, M. P. J. | Brill | Leiden | M. Cornelii Frontonis Epistulae, 1954 | Ancient Rome |
Fronto.AdMAntoniumImpEpist. | M. Cornelius Fronto Cirtensis | Epistula ad M. Antonium imperator | Prose | Imperial | Van den Hout, M. P. J. | Brill | Leiden | M. Cornelii Frontonis Epistulae, 1954 | Ancient Rome |
Gaius.inst. | Gaius iurisconsultus | Institutiones | Prose | Imperial | Seckel, E., Kübler, B. | Teubner | Stuttgart | Gai Institutiones, 1969 | Ancient Rome |
Gall.epigr. | C. Asinius Gallus | Epigramma | Poetry | Classical | Morel, W. | Teubner | Leipzig | Fragmenta Poetarum Latinorum Epicorum et Lyricorum praeter Ennium et Lucilium, 1927 | Ancient Rome |
Gell. | Aulus Gellius | Noctes Atticae | Prose | Imperial | Marshall, P. K. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | A. Gelli Noctes Atticae, 1990 | Ancient Rome |
Germ. | Germanicus Caesar | Aratea | Poetry | Imperial | Gain, D. B. | The Athelone Press | London | The Aratus ascribed to Germanicus Caesar, 1976 | Ancient Rome |
Gratt. | Grattius | Cynegetica | Poetry | Imperial | Enk, P. H. | W. J. Thieme & cie. | California | Gratti Cynegeticon Quae Supersunt, 1918 | Ancient Rome |
Hor.ars. | Quintus Horatius Flaccus | De arte poetica | Poetry | Classical | Klingner, F. | Teubner | Leipzig | Q. Horati Flacci Opera klingner, 1959 | Ancient Rome |
Hor.carm. | Quintus Horatius Flaccus | Carmina | Poetry | Classical | Klingner, F. | Teubner | Leipzig | Q. Horati Flacci Opera klingner, 1959 | Ancient Rome |
Hor.epist. | Quintus Horatius Flaccus | Epistulae | Poetry | Classical | Klingner, F. | Teubner | Leipzig | Q. Horati Flacci Opera klingner, 1959 | Ancient Rome |
Hor.epod. | Quintus Horatius Flaccus | Epodi | Poetry | Classical | Klingner, F. | Teubner | Leipzig | Q. Horati Flacci Opera klingner, 1959 | Ancient Rome |
Hor.sat. | Quintus Horatius Flaccus | Saturae (sermones) | Poetry | Classical | Klingner, F. | Teubner | Leipzig | Q. Horati Flacci Opera klingner, 1959 | Ancient Rome |
Hyg.astr. | Hyginus | Astronomica | Prose | Imperial | Le Boeuffle, A. | Belles Lettres | Paris | L'Astronomie, 1983 | Ancient Rome |
Hyg.fab. | Hyginus | Fabulae | Prose | Imperial | Rose, H. J. | Sijthoff | Leyden | Hygini Fabulae, 1933 | Ancient Rome |
Hyg.grom. | Hyginus | De limitibus | Prose | Imperial | Thulin, C. | Teubner | Leipzig | Corpus Agrimensorum Latinorum Vol. 1, 1971 | Ancient Rome |
Hyg.munCastr. | Pseudo Hyginus | De munitionibus castrorum | Prose | Imperial | Lenoir, M. | Belles Lettres | Paris | Des fortifications du camp, 1979 | Ancient Rome |
Iust. | Marcus Iunianus Iustinus | Epitoma historiarum Philippicarum Pompei Trogi | Prose | Imperial | Arnaud-Lindet, M.P. | Bibliotheca Augustana | online | Epitoma Historiarum Philippicarum Pompeii Trogi, 2003 | Ancient Rome |
Liv. | Titus Livius Patavinus | Ab urbe condita | Prose | Classical | Conway, R. S., Walters, C. F., et alii | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | Ab urbe condita, 1914-1969 | Ancient Rome |
Liv.perioch. | operis Liviani epitoma | Prose | Imperial | Jal. P. | Belles Lettres | Paris | Abrégés des Livres de l'Histoire Romaine de Tite-Live, 1984 | Ancient Rome | |
Iuv. | D. Iunius Iuvenalis | Carmina | Poetry | Imperial | Clausen, W. V. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | A. Persi Flacci et D. Iuni Iuvenalis Saturae, 1959 | Ancient Rome |
Lucan. | M. Anneus Lucanus | Bellum civile | Poetry | Imperial | Housman, A. E. | Basil Blackwell | Oxford | M. Annaei Lucani Belli Civilis Libri Decem, 1927 | Ancient Rome |
Lucil. | C. Lucilius | Saturarum fragmenta | Poetry | Early | Marx, F. | Teubner | Leipzig | C. Lucilii Carminum Reliquiae marx, 1904 | Ancient Rome |
Lucr. | Titus Lucretius Carus | De rerum natura | Poetry | Classical | martin, J. | Teubner | Leipzig | De Rerum Natura Libri Sex, 1953 | Ancient Rome |
Manil. | M. Manilius | Astronomica | Poetry | Imperial | Morel, W. | Teubner | Leipzig | Fragmenta Poetarum Latinorum Epicorum et Lyricorum praeter Ennium et Lucilium, 1927 | Ancient Rome |
Mart. | M. Valerius Martialis | Epigrammata | Poetry | Imperial | Heraeus, W., Borovxkij, J. | Teubner | Leipzig | M. Valerii Martialis Epigrammaton Libri, 1925 | Ancient Rome |
Mela. | Pomponius Mela | De chorographia | Prose | Imperial | Ranstrand, G. | Universitas Gothoburgensis | Stockholm | Pomponii Melae De Chorographia Libri Tres : Una Cum Indice Verborum, 1971 | Ancient Rome |
Naev.com. | Cn. Naevius | Comoediarum fragmenta | Drama | Early | Ribbeck, O. | Teubner | Leipzig | Scaenicae Romanorum Poesis Fragmenta Vols. 1-2, 1898 | Ancient Rome |
Naev.trag. | Cn. Naevius | Tragoediarum fragmenta | Drama | Early | Ribbeck, O. | Teubner | Leipzig | Scaenicae Romanorum Poesis Fragmenta Vol. 1, 1898 | Ancient Rome |
Nep.Ages. | Cornelius Nepos | Agesilaus | Prose | Classical | Marshall, P. K. | Teubner | Leipzig | Cornelii Nepotis Vitae cum Fragmentis, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Nep.Alc. | Cornelius Nepos | Alcibiades | Prose | Classical | Marshall, P. K. | Teubner | Leipzig | Cornelii Nepotis Vitae cum Fragmentis, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Nep.Arist. | Cornelius Nepos | Aristides | Prose | Classical | Marshall, P. K. | Teubner | Leipzig | Cornelii Nepotis Vitae cum Fragmentis, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Nep.Att. | Cornelius Nepos | Atticus | Prose | Classical | Marshall, P. K. | Teubner | Leipzig | Cornelii Nepotis Vitae cum Fragmentis, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Nep.Dat. | Cornelius Nepos | Datames | Prose | Classical | Marshall, P. K. | Teubner | Leipzig | Cornelii Nepotis Vitae cum Fragmentis, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Nep.Epam. | Cornelius Nepos | Epaminondas | Prose | Classical | Marshall, P. K. | Teubner | Leipzig | Cornelii Nepotis Vitae cum Fragmentis, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Nep.Eum. | Cornelius Nepos | Eumenes | Prose | Classical | Marshall, P. K. | Teubner | Leipzig | Cornelii Nepotis Vitae cum Fragmentis, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Nep.Ham. | Cornelius Nepos | Hamilcar | Prose | Classical | Marshall, P. K. | Teubner | Leipzig | Cornelii Nepotis Vitae cum Fragmentis, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Nep.Hann. | Cornelius Nepos | Hannibal | Prose | Classical | Marshall, P. K. | Teubner | Leipzig | Cornelii Nepotis Vitae cum Fragmentis, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Nep.Iph. | Cornelius Nepos | Iphicrates | Prose | Classical | Marshall, P. K. | Teubner | Leipzig | Cornelii Nepotis Vitae cum Fragmentis, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Nep.Milt. | Cornelius Nepos | Miltiades | Prose | Classical | Marshall, P. K. | Teubner | Leipzig | Cornelii Nepotis Vitae cum Fragmentis, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Nep.Paus. | Cornelius Nepos | Pausanias | Prose | Classical | Marshall, P. K. | Teubner | Leipzig | Cornelii Nepotis Vitae cum Fragmentis, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Nep.Them. | Cornelius Nepos | Themistocles | Prose | Classical | Marshall, P. K. | Teubner | Leipzig | Cornelii Nepotis Vitae cum Fragmentis, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Novius.Atell. | Novius | Atellanarum fragmenta | Drama | Classical | Ribbeck, O. | Teubner | Leipzig | Scaenicae Romanorum Poesis Fragmenta Vol. 2, 1898 | Ancient Rome |
Octavia. | Octavia | Drama | Imperial | Zwierlein, O. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | L. Annaei Senecae Tragoediae, Incertorum Auctorum Hercules [Oetaeus], Octavia, 1987 | Ancient Rome | |
Ov.am. | Publius Ovidius Naso | Amores | Poetry | Classical | Showerman, G., Goold, G. P. | Loeb Classical Library | Cambridge | Ovid in Six Volumes Vol. 1, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Ov.ars. | Publius Ovidius Naso | Ars amatoria | Poetry | Classical | Mozley, J. H., Goold, G. P. | Loeb Classical Library | Cambridge | Ovid in Six Volumes Vol. 2, 1979 | Ancient Rome |
Ov.epist. | Publius Ovidius Naso | Epistulae (heroides) | Poetry | Classical | Showerman, G., Goold, G. P. | Loeb Classical Library | Cambridge | Ovid in Six Volumes Vol. 1, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Ov.fast. | Publius Ovidius Naso | Fasti | Poetry | Classical | Alton, E. H., Wormell, D. E. W. | Teubner | Leipzig | P. Ovidi Nasonis Fastorum libri sex, 1978 | Ancient Rome |
Ov.Ibis. | Publius Ovidius Naso | Ibis | Poetry | Classical | Mozley, J. H., Goold, G. P. | Loeb Classical Library | Cambridge | Ovid in Six Volumes Vol. 2, 1979 | Ancient Rome |
Ov.met. | Publius Ovidius Naso | Metamorphoses | Poetry | Classical | Miller, F. J., Goold, G. P. | Loeb Classical Library | Cambridge | Ovid: Metamorphoses in Two Volumes, 1977-1984 | Ancient Rome |
Ov.Pont. | Publius Ovidius Naso | Epistulae ex Ponto | Poetry | Classical | André, J. | Belles Lettres | Paris | Pontiques, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Ov.rem. | Publius Ovidius Naso | Remedia amoris | Poetry | Classical | Mozley, J. H., Goold, G. P. | Loeb Classical Library | Cambridge | Ovid in Six Volumes Vol. 2, 1979 | Ancient Rome |
Ov.trist. | Publius Ovidius Naso | Tristia | Poetry | Classical | Luck, G. | Karl Winter | Heidelberg | P. Ovidius Naso: Tristia, 1967 | Ancient Rome |
Pacuv.trag. | M. Pacuvius | Tragoediarum fragmenta | Drama | Early | Ribbeck, O. | Teubner | Leipzig | Scaenicae Romanorum Poesis Fragmenta Vol. 1, 1898 | Ancient Rome |
Pers. | A. Persius Flaccus | Satura | Poetry | Imperial | Clausen, W. V. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | A. Persi Flacci et D. Iuni Iuvenalis Saturae, 1959 | Ancient Rome |
Petron. | Petronius (arbiter) | Satyrica | Prose | Imperial | Müller, K., Ehlers, W. | De Gruyter | Berlin | Petronius: Satyrica, 1983 | Ancient Rome |
Phaedr. | Phaedrus Augusti libertus | Fabulae | Poetry | Imperial | Guaglianone, A. | Augus Taurinorum, osv. | Turin | Phaedri Augusti Liberti Liber Fabularum, 1969 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Amph. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Amphitruo | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 1, 1895 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Asin. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Asinaria | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 1, 1895 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Aul. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Aulularia | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 1, 1895 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Bacch. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Bacchides | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 1, 1895 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Capt. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Captivi | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 1, 1895 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Cas. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Casina | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 1, 1895 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Cist. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Cistellaria | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 1, 1895 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Curc. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Curculio | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 1, 1895 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Epid. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Epidicus | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 1, 1895 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Men. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Menaechmi | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 1, 1895 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Merc. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Mercator | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 1, 1895 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Mil. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Miles Gloriosus | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 2, 1896 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Most. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Mostellaria | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 2, 1896 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Persa. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Persa | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 2, 1896 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Poen. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Poenulus | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 2, 1896 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Pseud. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Pseudolus | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 2, 1896 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Rud. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Rudens | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 2, 1896 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Stich. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Stichus | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 2, 1896 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Trin. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Trinummus | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 2, 1896 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Truc. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Truculentus | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 2, 1896 | Ancient Rome |
Plaut.Vid. | Titus Maccius Plautus | Vidularia | Drama | Early | Leo, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Plauti Comoediae Vol. 2, 1896 | Ancient Rome |
Plin.nat. | C. Secundus Plinius | Naturalis historia | Prose | Imperial | Mayhoff, K. F. T., von Jan, L. | Teubner | Leipzig | C. Plini Secundi Naturalis Historiae Libri XXXVII, 1892-1909 | Ancient Rome |
Plin.epist. | C. Plinius Caecilius Secundos | Epistulae | Prose | Imperial | Mynors, R. A. B. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | C. Plini Caecili Secundi Epistularum Libri Decem, 1966 | Ancient Rome |
Plin.paneg. | C. Plinius Caecilius Secundos | Panegyricus | Prose | Imperial | Mynors, R. A. B. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | XII Panegyrici Latini, 1964 | Ancient Rome |
Pompon.praetext. | P. Pomponius Secundus | Fabularum praetextarum fragmenta | Drama | Early | Ribbeck, O. | Teubner | Leipzig | Scaenicae Romanorum Poesis Fragmenta Vol. 1, 1898 | Ancient Rome |
Prop. | Sex. Propertius | Elegiae | Poetry | Classical | Barber, E. A. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | Sexti Properti Carmina, 1963 | Ancient Rome |
Publil. | Publilius Syrus | Sententiae | Poetry | Classical | Meyer, W. | Theobaldus Griebenus | Berlin | Publilii Syri Mimi Sententiae, 1880 | Ancient Rome |
QCic.pet. | Q. Tullius Cicero | Commentariolum petitionis | Prose | Classical | Watt, W. S. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | M. Tulli Ciceronis Epistulae Vol. 3, 1958 | Ancient Rome |
Quint.decl. | M. Fabius Quintilianus | Declamationes minores | Prose | Imperial | Winterbottom, M. | De Gruyter | Berlin | The Minor Declamations Ascribed to Quintilian, 1984 | Ancient Rome |
Quint.inst. | M. Fabius Quintilianus | Institutio oratoria | Prose | Imperial | Winterbottom, M. | De Gruyter | Berlin | M. Fabi Quintiliani Institutionis Oratoriae Libri Duodecim, 1970 | Ancient Rome |
PsQuint.decl. | Ps. M. Fabius Quintilianos | Declamationes maiores | Prose | Imperial | Håkanson, L. | De Gruyter | Berlin | Declamationes XIX Maiores Quintiliano Falso Ascriptae, 1982 | Ancient Rome |
Rhet.Her. | Rhetorica ad Herennium | Prose | Classical | Marx, F. | Teubner | Stuttgart | M. Tulli Ciceronis Scripta Quae Manserunt Omnia fasc. 1, 1923 | Ancient Rome | |
Rut.Lup. | Publius Rutilius Rufus | De vita sua | Prose | Early | Peter, H. | Teubner | Leipzig | Historicorum Romanorum Fragmenta Vol. 1, 1914 | Ancient Rome |
Sall.Catil. | C. Sallustius Crispus | De coniuratione Catilinae | Prose | Classical | Kurfess, A. | Teubner | Leipzig | C. Sallusti Crispi Catilina, Iugurtha, Fragmenta Ampliora, 1957 | Ancient Rome |
Sall.epist. | C. Sallustius Crispus | Epistulae | Prose | Classical | Kurfess, A. | Teubner | Leipzig | Appendix Sallustiana, 1970 | Ancient Rome |
Sall.hist. | C. Sallustius Crispus | Historiarum reliquiae | Prose | Classical | Maurenbrecher, B. | Teubner | Leipzig | C. Sallusti Crispi Historiarum Reliquiae, 1893 | Ancient Rome |
Sall.Iug. | C. Sallustius Crispus | De bello Iugurthino | Prose | Classical | Kurfess, A. | Teubner | Leipzig | C. Sallusti Crispi Catilina, Iugurtha, Fragmenta Ampliora, 1957 | Ancient Rome |
PsSall.rep. | Ps. C. Sallustius Crispus | Epistulae ad Caesarem senem de re publica | Prose | Classical | Kurfess, A. | Teubner | Leipzig | Appendix Sallustiana, 1970 | Ancient Rome |
ScribLarg. | Scribonius Largus | Compositiones | Prose | Imperial | Sconocchia, S. | Teubner | Leipzig | Scribonii Largi Compositiones, 1983 | Ancient Rome |
Sen.contr. | L. Annaeus Seneca (rhetor) | Controversiae | Prose | Imperial | Winterbottom, M. | Loeb Classical Library | Cambridge | The Elder Seneca: Declamations in Two Volumes, 1974 | Ancient Rome |
Sen.suas. | L. Annaeus Seneca (rhetor) | Suasoriae | Prose | Imperial | Winterbottom, M. | Loeb Classical Library | Cambridge | The Elder Seneca: Declamations in Two Volumes, 1974 | Ancient Rome |
Sen.Ag. | L. Annaeus Seneca (philosophus) | Agamemno | Drama | Imperial | Zwierlein, O. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | L. Annaei Senecae Tragoediae, Incertorum Auctorum Hercules [Oetaeus], Octavia, 1987 | Ancient Rome |
Sen.apocol. | L. Annaeus Seneca (philosophus) | Divi Claudii apocolocyntosis | Prose | Imperial | Eden, P. T. | Cambridge classical texts | Cambridge | Seneca: Apocolocyntosis, 1984 | Ancient Rome |
Sen.benef. | L. Annaeus Seneca (philosophus) | De beneficiis | Prose | Imperial | Hosius, C. | Teubner | Leipzig | L. Annaei Senecae opera quae supersunt Vol. 1, fasc. 2, 1914 | Ancient Rome |
Sen.clem. | L. Annaeus Seneca (philosophus) | De clementia | Prose | Imperial | Hosius, C. | Teubner | Leipzig | L. Annaei Senecae opera quae supersunt Vol. 1, fasc. 2, 1900 | Ancient Rome |
Sen.dial. | L. Annaeus Seneca (philosophus) | Dialogi | Prose | Imperial | Reynolds, L. D. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | L. Annaei Senecae Dialogorum Libri Duodecim, 1977 | Ancient Rome |
Sen.epist. | L. Annaeus Seneca (philosophus) | Epistulae morales ad Lucilium | Prose | Imperial | Reynolds, L. D. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | L. Annaei Senecae ad Lucilium Epistulae Morales, 1965 | Ancient Rome |
Sen.HercF. | L. Annaeus Seneca (philosophus) | Hercules (furens) | Drama | Imperial | Zwierlein, O. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | L. Annaei Senecae Tragoediae, Incertorum Auctorum Hercules [Oetaeus], Octavia, 1987 | Ancient Rome |
Sen.HercO. | L. Annaeus Seneca (philosophus) | Hercules (Oataeus) | Drama | Imperial | Zwierlein, O. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | L. Annaei Senecae Tragoediae, Incertorum Auctorum Hercules [Oetaeus], Octavia, 1987 | Ancient Rome |
Sen.Med. | L. Annaeus Seneca (philosophus) | Medea | Drama | Imperial | Zwierlein, O. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | L. Annaei Senecae Tragoediae, Incertorum Auctorum Hercules [Oetaeus], Octavia, 1987 | Ancient Rome |
Sen.nat. | L. Annaeus Seneca (philosophus) | Naturales quaestiones | Prose | Imperial | Oltramare, P. | Belles Lettres | Paris | Seneque, Questions Naturelles, 1929 | Ancient Rome |
Sen.Oed. | L. Annaeus Seneca (philosophus) | Oedipus | Drama | Imperial | Zwierlein, O. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | L. Annaei Senecae Tragoediae, Incertorum Auctorum Hercules [Oetaeus], Octavia, 1987 | Ancient Rome |
Sen.Phaedr. | L. Annaeus Seneca (philosophus) | Phaedra | Drama | Imperial | Zwierlein, O. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | L. Annaei Senecae Tragoediae, Incertorum Auctorum Hercules [Oetaeus], Octavia, 1987 | Ancient Rome |
Sen.Phoen. | L. Annaeus Seneca (philosophus) | Phoenissae | Drama | Imperial | Zwierlein, O. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | L. Annaei Senecae Tragoediae, Incertorum Auctorum Hercules [Oetaeus], Octavia, 1987 | Ancient Rome |
Sen.Thy. | L. Annaeus Seneca (philosophus) | Thyestes | Drama | Imperial | Zwierlein, O. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | L. Annaei Senecae Tragoediae, Incertorum Auctorum Hercules [Oetaeus], Octavia, 1987 | Ancient Rome |
Sen.Tro. | L. Annaeus Seneca (philosophus) | Troades | Drama | Imperial | Zwierlein, O. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | L. Annaei Senecae Tragoediae, Incertorum Auctorum Hercules [Oetaeus], Octavia, 1987 | Ancient Rome |
Sil. | Ti. Catius Asconius Silius Italicus | Punica | Poetry | Imperial | Summers, W. C. | Sumptibus G. Bell et filiorum | London | Corpus Poetarum Latinorum Vol. 3, 1905 | Ancient Rome |
Stat.silv. | P. Papinius Statius | Silvae | Drama | Imperial | Marastoni, A. | Teubner | Leipzig | P. Papini Stati Silvae, 1970 | Ancient Rome |
Stat.Theb. | P. Papinius Statius | Thebais | Drama | Imperial | Hill, D. E. | Brill | Lugduni Batavorum | P. Papini Stati Thebaidos Libri XII, 1983 | Ancient Rome |
Suet.Aug. | C. Suetonius Tranquillus | Vita Augusti | Prose | Imperial | Ihm, M. | Teubner | Stuttgart | C. Suetoni Tranquilli Opera Vol. 1, 1908 | Ancient Rome |
Suet.Cal. | C. Suetonius Tranquillus | Vita caligulae | Prose | Imperial | Ihm, M. | Teubner | Stuttgart | C. Suetoni Tranquilli Opera Vol. 1, 1908 | Ancient Rome |
Suet.Claud. | C. Suetonius Tranquillus | Vita Claudii | Prose | Imperial | Ihm, M. | Teubner | Stuttgart | C. Suetoni Tranquilli Opera Vol. 1, 1908 | Ancient Rome |
Suet.Dom. | C. Suetonius Tranquillus | Vita Domitiani | Prose | Imperial | Ihm, M. | Teubner | Stuttgart | C. Suetoni Tranquilli Opera Vol. 1, 1908 | Ancient Rome |
Suet.galba. | C. Suetonius Tranquillus | Vita Galbae | Prose | Imperial | Ihm, M. | Teubner | Stuttgart | C. Suetoni Tranquilli Opera Vol. 1, 1908 | Ancient Rome |
Suet.Iul. | C. Suetonius Tranquillus | Vita Iulii | Prose | Imperial | Ihm, M. | Teubner | Stuttgart | C. Suetoni Tranquilli Opera Vol. 1, 1908 | Ancient Rome |
Suet.Nero. | C. Suetonius Tranquillus | Vita Neronis | Prose | Imperial | Ihm, M. | Teubner | Stuttgart | C. Suetoni Tranquilli Opera Vol. 1, 1908 | Ancient Rome |
Suet.Otho. | C. Suetonius Tranquillus | Vita Othonis | Prose | Imperial | Ihm, M. | Teubner | Stuttgart | C. Suetoni Tranquilli Opera Vol. 1, 1908 | Ancient Rome |
Suet.Tib. | C. Suetonius Tranquillus | Vita Tiberii | Prose | Imperial | Ihm, M. | Teubner | Stuttgart | C. Suetoni Tranquilli Opera Vol. 1, 1908 | Ancient Rome |
Suet.Tit. | C. Suetonius Tranquillus | Vita Titi | Prose | Imperial | Ihm, M. | Teubner | Stuttgart | C. Suetoni Tranquilli Opera Vol. 1, 1908 | Ancient Rome |
Suet.Vesp. | C. Suetonius Tranquillus | Vita Vespasiani | Prose | Imperial | Ihm, M. | Teubner | Stuttgart | C. Suetoni Tranquilli Opera Vol. 1, 1908 | Ancient Rome |
Suet.Vit. | C. Suetonius Tranquillus | Vita Vitellii | Prose | Imperial | Ihm, M. | Teubner | Stuttgart | C. Suetoni Tranquilli Opera Vol. 1, 1908 | Ancient Rome |
Tac.Agr. | (P.) Cornelius Tacitus | De vita Iulii Agricolae | Prose | Imperial | Anderson, J. G. C. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | Cornelii Taciti Opera Minora, 1939 | Ancient Rome |
Tac.ann. | (P.) Cornelius Tacitus | Annales | Prose | Imperial | Fisher, C. D. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | Cornelii Taciti Annalium Ab Excessu Divi Augusti Libri, 1906 | Ancient Rome |
Tac.dial. | (P.) Cornelius Tacitus | Dialogus de oratoribus | Prose | Imperial | Anderson, J. G. C. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | Cornelii Taciti Opera Minora, 1939 | Ancient Rome |
Tac.Germ. | (P.) Cornelius Tacitus | Germania | Prose | Imperial | Anderson, J. G. C. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | Cornelii Taciti Opera Minora, 1939 | Ancient Rome |
Tac.hist. | (P.) Cornelius Tacitus | Historiae | Prose | Imperial | Fisher, C. D. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | Cornelii Taciti: Historiarum Libri, 1911 | Ancient Rome |
Ter.Ad. | P. Terentius Afer | Adelphoe | Drama | Early | Kauer, R., Lindsay, W. M., Skutsch, O. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | P. Terenti Afri Comoediae, 1958 | Ancient Rome |
Ter.Andr. | P. Terentius Afer | Andria | Drama | Early | Kauer, R., Lindsay, W. M., Skutsch, O. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | P. Terenti Afri Comoediae, 1958 | Ancient Rome |
Ter.Eun. | P. Terentius Afer | Eunuchus | Drama | Early | Kauer, R., Lindsay, W. M., Skutsch, O. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | P. Terenti Afri Comoediae, 1958 | Ancient Rome |
Ter.Haut. | P. Terentius Afer | Heautontimorumenos | Drama | Early | Kauer, R., Lindsay, W. M., Skutsch, O. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | P. Terenti Afri Comoediae, 1958 | Ancient Rome |
Ter.Hec. | P. Terentius Afer | hecyra | Drama | Early | Kauer, R., Lindsay, W. M., Skutsch, O. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | P. Terenti Afri Comoediae, 1958 | Ancient Rome |
Ter.Phorm. | P. Terentius Afer | Phormio | Drama | Early | Kauer, R., Lindsay, W. M., Skutsch, O. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | P. Terenti Afri Comoediae, 1958 | Ancient Rome |
Tib. | Albius Tibullus | Elegiae | Poetry | Classical | Galinsky, G. K., Lenz, F. W. | E. J. Brill | Leiden | Albi Tibulli Aliorumque Carminum Libri Tres, 1971 | Ancient Rome |
Trabea.com. | Trabea | Comoediarum palliatarum fragmenta | Drama | Early | Kauer, R., Lindsay, W. M., Skutsch, O. | Clarendon University Press | Oxford | P. Terenti Afri Comoediae, 1958 | Ancient Rome |
ValMax. | Valerius Maximus | Dicta et facta memorabilia | Prose | Imperial | Kempf, C. | Teubner | Leipzig | Valerii Maximi Factorum et Dictorum Memorabilium Libri Novem, 1888 | Ancient Rome |
Varro.ling. | M. Terentius Varro Reatinus | De lingua latina | Prose | Classical | Goetz, G., Schoell, F. | Teubner | Leipzig | M. Terenti Varronis De lingua latina quae supersunt, 1910 | Ancient Rome |
Varro.Men. | M. Terentius Varro Reatinus | Menippearum fragmenta | Drama | Classical | Bücheler, F. | Weidmann | Berlin | Petronii Saturae, Adiectae Sunt Varronis et Senecae Saturae Similesque Reliquiae, 1963 | Ancient Rome |
Varro.rust. | M. Terentius Varro Reatinus | Res rusticae | Prose | Classical | Goetz, G. | Teubner | Leipzig | M. Terenti Varronis Rerum Rusticarum Libri Tres, 1929 | Ancient Rome |
Vell. | Velleius Paterculus | Historiae Romanae | Prose | Imperial | Hellegouarc'h, J. | Belles Lettres | Paris | Velleius Paterculus: Histoire Romaine, 1982 | Ancient Rome |
Verg.Aen. | Publius Vergilius Maro | Aeneis | Poetry | Classical | Mynors, R. A. B. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | P. Vergili Maronis Opera, 1972 | Ancient Rome |
Verg.ecl. | Publius Vergilius Maro | Eclogae | Poetry | Classical | Mynors, R. A. B. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | P. Vergili Maronis Opera, 1972 | Ancient Rome |
Verg.georg. | Publius Vergilius Maro | Georgica | Poetry | Classical | Mynors, R. A. B. | Oxford classical texts | Oxford | P. Vergili Maronis Opera, 1972 | Ancient Rome |
Vitr. | Vitruvius | De architectura | Prose | Classical | Krohn, F. | Teubner | Leipzig | Vitruvii de Architectura, 1912 | Ancient Rome |
List of Lemmata
The lemmatization is based on the underlying adjectival form (see Annotation model for further details).
Lemma | Count |
---|
Glossary
Latin adverbial phrase | Meaning (english) | Adjective | Etymology |
---|---|---|---|
a coacto | coercedly | coactus | Perfect passive participle of cogere (to collect, compel) < cum + agere < *h2eg-e/o (to drive, lead) |
a longinquo | from afar | longinquus | From longus (long) < *dlongh-o (far, for a long while) |
a parvo | as a child | parvus | From parvus (small) < *peh2u-ro (small) |
a parvolo | as a little child | parvolus | From parvus (small) < peh2u-ro (small) + diminutive sufix - ulus |
a primo | from the beggining | primus | From primus (first) < *pre(i) (before) |
a probatissimo | certified | probatissimus | Perfect passive participle of probare ( to approve of, commend) , derivate from probus < pro + *bh(h2)u-o- (excellent, good). Superlative |
a salvo | safely | salvus | Salvus (safe, secure) < *slH-u- (whole) |
ab accepto | from the beggining | acceptus | Perfect passive participle of accipere (to take, recieve) < ad + capere < *kh2p-i- (to seize) |
ab incepto | from the beggining | inceptus | Perfect passive participle of incipere (to start) < in + capere < *kh2p-i- (to seize) |
ab inchoato | from the beggining | inchoatus | Perfect passive participle of incohare (to start making), derived from cohum (the hollow in the middle of a yoke) |
ab infimo | from the bottom | infimus | Infimus (lowest, deepest) |
ab integro | again | integer | From in + *teger (untouched) < tangere < *th2-n-g- (to touch) |
ab invito | unwillingly | invitus | Invitus (unwilling) maybe from in + *ueih1 (try to get) |
ab obliquo | sideways | obliquus | Obliquus (slanting, transverse) |
ad dextram | to the right | dexter | Dexter (right -opposite of left-) < *deks-tero- |
ad extremum | to the extreme | extremus | From preposition ex as superlative extremus (situated at the end) |
ad imum | to the bottom/into the sea | imus | Imus (lowest, deepest, innermost) |
ad incitas | to victory | incitus | From ciere (to move, stir up) > incitus (set in rapid motion) |
ad laevam | to the left | laevus | Laevus (left) < *leh2i-uo- |
ad perfectum | entirely | perfectus | Perfect passive participle of perficere (to bring to an end, archieve) from per- + facere < *dhh1-k- (to make) |
ad plenum | entirely | plenus | From plere (to fill) *pleh1 (to full) > plenus (full) |
ad posterum | at the end | posterus | From post (in the rear, behind), *pos > posterus , presumably an old comparative |
ad serium | seriously | serius | Serius (important, serious) < *seh1-ro (slow, heavy) |
ad summam | at the end | summus | Summus (highest) < *(h1)up-m(H)o (highest) |
ad ultimum | at the end | ultimus | From preposition uls as superlative ultimus (farthest away) |
cum primis | primarily | primus | From primus (first) < *pre(i) (before) |
de alieno | with someone else's money | alienus | From alius (other) < *h2el-io- > alienus (belonging to others) |
de audito | by hearsay | auditus | Perfect passive participle of audire (to hear) < *h2eu-is (clearly) + *dhh1-ie/o (to render) |
de compecto | agreedly | compectus | Perfect passive participle of compacisci (to make an agreement) < cum + pacisci < *peh2k (agreement) |
de improviso | suddenly | improvisus | Improvisus (unexpected) from in + provisus, perfect passive participle of providere (to foresee) < pro + *uid-eh1 (to see) |
de integro | again | integer | From in + * teger (untouched) < tangere < *th2-n-g- (to touch) |
denuo | again | novus | Novus (new) < *neuo (new) |
de plano | entirely | planus | Planus (level, flat) < *pl(e)h2-no (flattened) |
de pleno | entirely | plenus | From plere (to fill) *pleh1 (to full) > plenus (full) |
de professo | agreedly | professus | Perfect passive participle of profari (to speak out) < pro + fari < *bheh2/*bhh2 (to speak) |
de proximo | from next door | proximus | From adverb prope (near, close) as a superlative proximus (nearest) |
de publico | with public money | publicus | From pubes (adult population) > publicus (of the people) |
derepente | suddenly | repens | Repens (sudden, unexpected) < *h1rep-nt- (seizing) |
de repentino | suddenly | repentinus | Derived from repens (sudden, unexpected) |
de subito | suddenly | subitus | Perfect passive participle of subire (to go up, occur) from sub + ire < *h1ei (to go) |
de meo | with my own money | meus | Derived from me (pron. pers. 1s. oblique) < *h1me |
de tuo | with your own money | tuus | Derived from tu (pron. pers. 2s. nom.) < *ti(H) |
de suo | with his own money | suus | Derived from se (pron. reflex.) < *se |
de toto | entirely | totus | Totus (the whole of, all) |
de vostro | with your own money | vester | Derived from vos (pron. pers. 2p.) < *tuh2 |
e contrario | on the contrary | contrarius | Derived from contra (in front of, against) < PIt. *kom-teros (the other of two who meet) |
e diverso | on the contrary | diversus | From dis + versus , perfect passive participle of vertere (to turn) < *uert-e/o |
e proximo | closely | proximus | From adverb prope (near, close) as a superlative proximus (nearest) |
e longinquo | from afar | longinquus | From longus (long) < *dlongh-o (far, for a long while) |
e pleno | en abundancia (aplenty) | plenus | From plere (to fill) *pleh1 (to full) > plenus (full) |
e tuto | from a safe place | tutus | Old perfect passive participle of tueri (to look at, watch over) < *touh2-eie- |
ex abdito | from a hidden place | abditus | Perfect passive participle of abdere (to hide, conceal) < ab + dare < *dhi-dhh1 |
ex abundanti | aplenty | abundans | From unda (wave) > undare (to rise in waves) > abundare (to overflow) |
ex adventicio | unprecedentedly | adventicius | From advenire (to arrive) < ad + venire < *gwn-je/o > adventicius (foreign, unusual) |
ex adverso | on the other hand | adversus | Perfect passive participle of advertere (to set opposite, turn toward) < ad + vertere (to turn) < *uert-e/o |
ex aequo | equally | aequus | Aequus (level, equal) |
ex alto | from atop | altus | Altus (high) < h2el-to- (high, bank, coast) |
ex antiquo | in an old fashioned way | antiquus | From ante (before) < *h2ent-i (front) > antiquus (lying in front, ancient, early) |
ex aperto | visibly | apertus | Perfect passive particple of aperire (to open) < *h2uer-i (to cover) |
ex audito | by hearsay | auditus | Perfect passive participle of audire (to hear) < *h2eu-is (clearly) + *dhh1-ie/o (to render) |
ex bono | of your own volition | bonus | Bonus (good) < PIt. *dweno- (good) |
ex commodo | comfortably | commodus | From cum + modus (convenient), modus (measured amount) < *med-o- (measure) |
ex composito | agreedly | compositus | Perfect passive participle of componere (match, arrange) < cum + ponere < PIt. *po-sine/o |
ex compacto | agreedly | compactus | Perfect passive participle of compacisci (to make an agreement) < cum + pacisci < *peh2k (agreement) |
ex contrario | contrary | contrarius | Derived from contra (in front of, against) < PIt. *kom-teros (the other of two who meet) |
ex convento | agreedly | conventus | Perfect passive participle of convenire (to agree) < cum + venire < *gwn-je/o (to come) |
ex denuntiato | avowedly | denuntiatus | Perfect passive participle of denuntiare (to announce, declare) < de + nuntiare < nuntius |
ex destinato | purposely | destinatus | Perfect passive participle of destinare (to secure, determine, intend) < de + stare < * sta-e-je (to stand) |
ex difficili | hardly | difficilis | Difficilis (difficult) < dis + facere < *fak-i (to make) |
ex disposito | in orderly fashion | dispositus | Perfect passive participle of disponere (to dispose, arrange) < dis + ponere < PIt. *po-sine/o |
ex diverso | differently | diversus | From dis + versus , perfect passive participle of vertere (to turn) < *uert-e/o |
ex facili | easily | facilis | Facilis (easy) < facere < *fak-i (to make) |
ex faciliore | very easily | facilior | Facilis (easy) < facere < *fak-i (to make). Comparative |
ex ignoto | from an unknown place | ignotus | Perfect passive participle of ignoscere (to overlook) < in + (g)nosco (to get to know) < *gnh3-ske- (to know) |
ex imo | from the deep | imus | Imus (lowest, deepest, innermost) |
ex improviso | suddenly | improvisus | Improvisus (unexpected) from in + provisus , perfect passive participle of providere (to foresee) < pro + *uid-eh1 (to see) |
ex incerto | unknowingly | incertus | Incertus (uncertain) < in + certus < old perfect passive participle of cernere (to distinguish) < *krito (sifted) |
ex inopinato | suddenly | inopinatus | Inopinatus (unexpected) < in + opinatus < opinari (suppose) |
ex insperato | suddenly | insperatus | Insperatus (unexpected) < in + speratus < perfect passive participle of sperare < spes |
ex instituto | customarily | institutus | Perfect passive participle of instituere (to establish, appoint) < in + statuere < *sta-e-je/o (to stand) |
ex integro | again | integer | From in + * teger (untouched) < tangere < *th2-n-g- (to touch) |
ex lento | calmly | lentus | Lentus (pliant, slow) < *lent-o- (soft, pliant) |
ex longinquo | from afar | longinquus | From longus (long) < *dlongh-o (far, for a long while) |
ex longo | from long ago | longus | Longus (long) < *dlongh-o (far, for a long while) |
ex manifesto | clearly | manifestus | Manifestus (evident, manifest) |
ex necopinato | suddenly | necopinatus | Necopinatus (unexpected) < nec + opinatus < opinari (suppose) |
ex obliquo | sideways | obliquus | Obliquus (slanting, transverse) |
ex occulto | secretly | occultus | Perfect passive participle of occulere (to cover, hide) < ob + celere < * Kel (hiding-place) |
ex pacto | agreedly | pactus | Perfect passive participle of pangere (to fix, determine) < * ph2-n-g (to attach) |
ex permisso | legitimately | permissus | Perfect passive participle of permittere (to let go, allow) < per + mittere < *m(e)ith2 (to exchange, remove) |
ex pleno | entirely | plenus | From plere (to fill) *pleh1 (to full) > plenus (full) |
ex praeparato | agreedly | preaparatus | Perfect passive participle of praeparare (to prepare) < prae + paro < *prh3 (providing) |
ex praescripto | customarily | praescriptus | Perfect passive participle of praescribere (to order, appoint) < prae + scribere < *skreibh-e/o (to carve) |
ex professo | on purpose | professus | Perfect passive participle of profari (to speak out) < pro + fari < *bheh2/*bhh2 (to speak) |
ex propinquo | closely | propinquus | Derived from adverb prope (near, close) |
ex proximo | from next door | proximus | From adverb prope (near, close) as a superlative proximus (nearest) |
ex responso | in a replying manner | responsus | Perfect passive participle of respondere (to reply, react) < re + spondere < * spond-eie |
ex solito | customarily | solitus | Perfect passive participle of solere (to be used to) < *sol-eh1 (to occupy, inhabit) |
ex toto | entirely | totus | Totus (the whole of, all) |
ex transverso | from side to side | transversus | Perfect passive participle of transvertere (to turn across) < trans + vertere (to turn) < *uert-e/o |
ex tuto | froma safe place | tutus | Old perfect passive participle of tueri (to look at, watch over) < *touh2-eie- |
in abdito | secretly | abditus | Perfect passive participle of abdere (to hide, conceal) < ab + dare < *dhi-dhh1 (to give) |
in adverso | opposite | adversus | Perfect passive participle of advertere (to set opposite, turn toward) < ad + vertere (to turn) < *uert-e/o |
in adversum | in the oppposite direction | adversus | Perfect passive participle of advertere (to set opposite, turn toward) < ad + vertere (to turn) < *uert-e/o |
in aequo | equally | aequus | Aequus (level, equal) |
in aeternum | forever | aeternus | Aeternus (eternal) < old avieternus < aevum < *h2eyu (long time) |
in alto | up high/at sea | altus | Altus (high) < h2el-to- (high, bank, coast) |
in altum | into the sea | altus | Altus (high) < h2el-to- (high, bank, coast) |
in ambiguo | ambiguously | ambiguus | From ambigere (to wander, hesitate) < ambi + agere < *h2eg-e/o (to drive, lead) |
in aperto | manifestly | apertus | Perfect passive participle of aperire (to uncover, open) < *h2epo (off, from) + *h2uer-i(e) (to cover) |
in apertum | in sight | apertus | Perfect passive participle of aperire (to uncover, open) < *h2epo (off, from) + *h2uer-i(e) (to cover) |
in arduo | hardly | arduus | Arduus (high, difficult) < *h3rdh-uo- (high, upright) |
in averso | opposite | aversus | Perfect passive participle of avertere (to turn away, avert) < ab + vertere (to turn) < *uert-e/o |
in aversum | opposite | aversus | Perfect passive participle of avertere (to turn away, avert) < ab + vertere (to turn) < *uert-e/o |
in barbarum | barbarically | barbarus | Barbarus (foreign, savage) < βάρβαρος (foreign, savage) |
in brevi | briefly | brevis | Brevis (short) < *mrgh-u- (short) |
in commune | in common | communis | Communis (common, general) < cum + munus (function, duty) < *h2moi-no- (exchange?) |
in concluso | secretly | conclusus | Perfect passive participle of concludere (to conclude, shut up) < cum + claudere (to close) < *kleh2u-d- (to shut) |
in condito | secretly | conditus | Perfect passive participle of condere (to put together, conclude) < cum + dare < *dhi-dhh1 |
in confesso | clearly | confessus | Perfect passive participle of confiteri (to confess, admit, agree, reveal) < cum + fateri < *bhh2-to (spoken) |
in conspicuo | in sight | conspicuus | Derived from conspicere (to watch, observe) < cum + specere (to watch) < *spek-ie/o (to look) |
in contrarium | on the contrary | contrarius | Derived from contra (in front of, against) < PIt. *kom-teros (the other of two who meet) |
in cotidiano | daily | cotidianus | Derived from adverb cotidie (daily, every day) |
in difficili | hardly | difficilis | Difficilis (difficult) < dis + facere < *fak-i (to make) |
in directum | directly | directus | Perfect passive participle of dirigere (to lay straight, direct) < dis + regere (to rule, guide) < *h3reg-e/o- (to stretch, direct) |
in diversum | in the oppposite direction | diversus | From dis + versus , perfect passive participle of vertere (to turn) < *uert-e/o |
in dubio | doubfully | dubius | Dubius (moving in two directions alternaly, uncertain) < duo + habere (to have, hold) < *ghh1b(h)-(e)i (to take) |
in edito | up high | editus | Perfect passive participle of edere (to bring forth, raise up) < ex + dare < *dhi-dhh1 |
in expedito | in an arranged manner | expeditus | Perfect passive participle of expedire (to make ready, prepare) < ex + pes < *pod-s (foot) |
in exiguo | briefly | exiguus | Exiguus (strict, exact) derived from exigere (to measure, determine) < ex + agere < *h2eg-e/o (to drive, lead) |
in facili | easily | facilis | Facilis (easy) < facere < *fak-i (to make) |
in imo | in the deep | imus | Imus (lowest, deepest, innermost) |
in incerto | uncertainly | incertus | Incertus (uncertain) < in + certus < old perfect passive participle of cernere (to distinguish) < *krito (sifted) |
in infinitum | infinitely | infinitus | Infinitus (endless, infinite) < in + finitus perfect passive participle of finire (to finish) < finis |
in integro | again | integer | From in + * teger (untouched) < tangere < *th2-n-g- (to touch) |
in irato | angrily | iratus | Iratus (angry, irate) derived from ira < *h1eis-h2 (anger) . Later perfect passive participle of irasci |
in longiquum | from afar | longinquus | From longus (long) < *dlongh-o (far, for a long while) |
in longum | llargely | longus | Longus (long) < *dlongh-o (far, for a long while) |
in lubrico | uncertainly | lubricus | Lubricus (slippery) < *sle/oubh-ro (gliding) |
in maius | increasingly | maior | Maior (greater, older) <megh-yos. Comparative of magnus (big) |
in medio | in the middle | medius | Medius (central, middle) < *medhi-o (middle) |
in mundo | clearly | mundus | Mundus (clean, elegant) < *mud-no(happy?) |
in numerato | in cash | numeratus | Perfect passive participle of numerare (to nomber, count) < numerus < *nem-e/os (apportioning) |
in obliquum | sideways | obliquus | Obliquus (slanting, transverse) |
in obscuro | privately | obscurus | Obscurus (dark, gloomy) < *skoh2-i-ro (dark, shady) |
in occulto | privately | occultus | Perfect passive participle of occulere (to cover, hide) < ob + celere < * Kel (hiding-place) |
in opaco | privately | opacus | Opacus (sheltered, shady) |
in operto | secretly | opertus | Perfect passive participle of operire (to cover, shut, close) < *h2epi (at, near) + *h2wer (to cover) |
in parvo | briefly | parvus | Parvus (small) < *peh2u-ro (small) |
in pauca | briefly | paucus | Paucus (few, small in number) < *peh2u (small) |
in perpetuum | perpetually | perpetuus | Perpetuus (perpetual, continuous) < per + petere (to beg, move towards) < *pt-(e)i (to fly) |
in perspicuo | manifestly | perspicuus | Perspicuus (clear, evident) derivedd from perspicere < per + specere (to watch) < *spek-ie/o (to look) |
in plano | on the floor | planus | Planus (level, flat) < *pl(e)h2-no (flattened) |
in plenum | entirely | plenus | From plere (to fill) *pleh1 (to full) > plenus (full) |
in posterum | in the future | posterus | Derived from adverb post (in the rear, behind, after). Probably the old comparative |
in postremo | at the end | postremus | Derived from adverb post (in the rear, behind, after) |
in praerupto | in sight | praeruptus | Perfect passive participle of praerumpere (to break off, tear to pieces) < prae + rumpere (to break) < *Hru-n-p- (to break) |
in praesens | now | praesens | Present active participle of praeesse (to be before something) < prae + esse < *h1esmi (to be, exist) |
in praesenti | now | praesens | Present active participle of praeesse (to be before something) < prae + esse < *h1esmi (to be, exist) |
in primis | primarily | primus | From primus (first) < *pre(i) (before) |
in privato | privately | privatus | Perfect passive participle of privare (to deprive, set apart) < privus (one's own, particular) |
in profundo | in the deep | profundus | Profundus (deep, profound) < pro + fundus < *bhudh-n-ó |
in pronum | prone | pronus | Derived from adverb pro ((forward) |
in promisso | promissorily | promissus | Perfect passive participle of promittere (to send forth, promise) < pro + mittere < *m(e)ith2 (to exchange, remove) |
in promptu | in sight/close | promptus | Perfect passive participle of promere (to bring forth, bring to light) < pro + emere < *h2em (to take) |
in propatulo | in sight | propatulus | Propatulus (uncovered) from patere (to be open) < pro + patulus < PIt. *pate (to be open) |
in propinquo | close | propinquus | Derived from adverb prope (near, close) |
in proximo | in the vicinity | proximus | From adverb prope (near, close) as a superlative proximus (nearest) |
in publico | publicly | publicus | From pubes (adult population) > publicus (of the people) |
in publicum | publicly | publicus | From pubes (adult population) > publicus (of the people) |
in recondito | secretly | reconditus | Perfect passive participle of recondere (to put away, hide) < re- + condere < cum + dare < *dhi-dhh1 |
in rectum | straight | rectus | Perfect passive participle of regere (to rule) < *h3reg-e/o- (to stretch, direct) |
in secreto | secretly | secretus | Perfect passive participle of secernere (to put apart, discern) < se- + cernere < *kr-n-i (to separate) |
in serium | seriously | serius | Serius (important, serious) < *seh1-ro (slow, heavy) |
in sicco | on the floor | siccus | Siccus (dry) < *si-sk-u (dry?) |
in solutum | in cash | solutus | Perfect passive participle of solvere (to release, pay) |
in stulto | stupidly | stultus | Stultus (foolish, stupid) derived from stolidus |
in subito | suddenly | subitus | Perfect passive participle of subire (to go up, occur) from sub + ire < *h1ei (to go) |
in subitum | suddenly | subitus | Perfect passive participle of subire (to go up, occur) from sub + ire < *h1ei (to go) |
in sublimi | at the top | sublimis | Sublimis (uplifted, elevated) < sub + limus (transverse) < PIt. *(s)imo? |
in summo | at the top | summus | Summus (highest) < *(h1)up-m(H)o (highest) |
in suspenso | in suspense | suspensus | Perfect passive participle of suspendere (to hang up) < sub + pendere < *(s)pend-e/-o (to spin |
in toto | entirely | totus | Totus (the whole of, all) |
in totum | entirely | totus | Totus (the whole of, all) |
in tranquillo | calmly | tranquillus | Tranquillus (calm, still) < maybe trans + * kwilno (quiet) |
in transversum | transversely | transversus | Perfect passive participle of transvertere (to turn across) < trans + vertere (to turn) < *uert-e/o |
in tuto | safely | tutus | Old perfect passive participle of tueri (to look at, watch over) < *touh2-eie- |
in vacuo | in vain | vacuus | Derivate from vacare (to be empty) < PIt- *wako (empty) |
in vacuum | in vain | vacuus | Derivate from vacare (to be empty) < PIt- *wako (empty) |
in vanum | in vain | vanus | Vanus (hollow, devoid) < *wano |
in vicinum | in the vicinity | vicinus | Derivate from vicus (village) < *ueik (settlement) |
in apertum | openly | apertus | Perfect passive participle of aperire (to uncover, open) < *h2epo (off, from) + *h2uer-i(e) (to cover) |
per commodum | comfortably | commodus | From cum + modus (convenient), modus (measured amount) < *med-o- (measure) |
per obliquum | sideways | obliquus | Obliquus (slanting, transverse) |
per occultum | secretly | occultus | Perfect passive participle of occulere (to cover, hide) < ob + celere < * Kel (hiding-place) |
per subitum | suddenly | subitus | Perfect passive participle of subire (to go up, occur) from sub + ire < *h1ei (to go) |
pro indiviso | indivisibly | indivisus | Perfect passive participle of dividere (to divide, distribute) + prefix in-. * (d)ui-dhh1 (divide in two) |
pro manifesto | manifestly | manifestus | Manifestus (evident, manifest) |
procul dubio | without question | dubius | Dubius (moving in two directions alternaly, uncertain) < duo + habere (to have, hold) < *ghh1b(h)-(e)i (to take) |
Full Text
see 66, 16
Quia nihil honestum est quod ab invito, [s:quod] [p:a] [a:coacto] [v:fit] .
Imperial
see 5, 15, 4
Quid expectas ut te aut hostis aliquis per exitium gentis tuae vindicet aut [s:rex] [p:a] [a:longinquo] potens [v:advolet] ?
Imperial
see 21, 18
[s:Rosa] recens [p:a] [a:longinquo] [v:olet] , sicca propius.
Imperial
see 1, 39
Inde tanto beneficio et inter mulieres familiaritatem auctam et puerum, utin domo [p:a] [a:parvo] [v:eductum] , in caritate atque honore fuisse.
Classical
see verse 8-10
Ego postquam te emi, [p:a] [a:parvolo] ut semper tibi apud me iusta et clemens [v:fuerit] servitus scis.
Early
see verse 604
Petam hincunde [p:a] [a:primo] [v:institi] .
Early
see verse 642
[p:A] [a:primo] [s:homo] [v:insanibat] .
Early
see 2, 75, 30
Sed tamen [s:consilium] [p:a] [a:primo] [v:reprehendendum] , laudanda constantia.
Classical
see 63, 212
[v:Fluit] omnino [s:numerus] [p:a] [a:primo] tum incitatius brevitate pedum.
Classical
see 2, 45
Circuitum [p:a] [a:primo] [v:discite] adgnoscere.
Classical
see 15, 41
Nunc vero [p:a] [a:primo] quidem mirabiliter occulta [s:natura] [v:est] nec perspici nec cognosci potest.
Classical
see 8, 11, 2
Eam tueri non posset nec Italiam quod ea pelleretur,sed hoc [p:a] [a:primo] [v:cogitavit] .
Classical
see 3, 30
Sunt omnia, ut dixi, facilia naturae, utiquequae [p:a] [a:primo] [v:facere] constituit.
Imperial
see 2, 26, 2
[v:Incipiamus] [p:a] [a:primo] . Nemo non benignus est sui iudex.
Imperial
see 2, 3, 3
Sternumentum etiam inter bona indicia est, et [s:cupiditas] cibi vel [p:a] [a:primo] [v:servata] , vel etiam post fastidium orta.
Imperial
see 7, 27, 4
Sed ut his succurri nullo modo potest,sic [p:a] [a:primo] tamen diu [v:tenenda] [s:ratio] curationis est.
Imperial
see 4, 2, 13
Non ergo oportet hocnisi [p:a] [a:probatissimo] [v:sumi]
Classical
see 81, 8
Debere beneficium potest etiam inprudens et rudis et unus e turba,utique dum prope [v:est] [p:ab] [a:accepto] , ignorat autem quantum pro eo debeat.
Imperial
see 4, 3, 1
[s:Quidam] , inquit, [p:ab] [a:inchoato] domos [v:exstruunt] , nec peraedificatis cultum adhibent.
Imperial
see verse 891
Age [s:tu] [p:ab] [a:infimo] [v:da] savium.
Early
see verse 825
Quia edepolambo [p:ab] [a:infimo] [s:tarmes] [v:secat] .
Early
see 7, 19, 1
[s:Collis] [v:erat] [p:ab] [a:infimo] acclivis.
Classical
see 7, 73, 3
Huc illi stipites demissi [p:ab] [a:infimo] [v:revincti] , ne revelli possent, ab ramis eminebant.
Classical
see 28, 43
Verbis ad exstinguendum invidiae crimentamquam mihi [p:ab] [a:infimo] quoque [s:periculum] [v:sit] ne mecum aemuletur.
Classical
see 3, 30, 5
Statim undiqueex aperto et abdito, superne, [p:ab] [a:infimo] , aquarum [v:fiet] [s:irruptio] .
Imperial
see 6, 4, 1
Quaeramus ergo quid sit [s:quod] terram [p:ab] [a:infimo] [v:moveat] , quod tanti molem ponderis pellat.
Imperial
see 6, 13, 1
[s:Haec] [p:ab] [a:infimo] [v:edita] et in quantum potuit elata.
Imperial
see 26, 4
Ferens, decimas maturius dabat,ut [s:equestria] [p:ab] [a:infimo] quoque [v:occuparentur] .
Imperial
p.12
Vel, uti dicitur, pinea[s], cum torquetur [s:humus] arida et [p:ab] [a:infimo] [v:erigitur] ad summum.
Imperial
p.27
Videtote quanto secus ego fecerim. [s:Omnia] [p:ab] [a:integro] [v:paranda] erant.
Classical
see 2, 147
Utrum existimatis minus operis esseunam columnam [v:efficere] [p:ab] [a:integro] novamnullo lapide redivivo an quattuor illas reponere.
Classical
see 4, 5
Ultima Cumaei venit iam carminis aetas;magnus [p:ab] [a:integro] saeclorum [v:nascitur] [s:ordo] .
Classical
see 43, 16
C. Claudius et Ti. Sempronius locassent, ea rata locatio ne esset: [p:ab] [a:integro] [v:locarentur] , et ut omnibus redimendi et conducendi promiscue ius esset.
Classical
see 4, 2
Secundum proximi temporis possessionem non conveniunt, diversas attiguis possessoribus faciunt controversias, et [p:ab] [a:integro] [s:alius] forte de loco alius de fine [v:litigat] .
Imperial
see 1, 14
Quasi vero non intellegamus [p:ab] [a:invito] [v:emere] iniuriosum esse, ab non invito quaestuosum.
Classical
see 1, 14
Cavet enim vir optimusne [v:emat] [p:ab] [a:invito] .
Classical
see 2, 62
Agros nominare non possumquia [v:tangam] nullum [p:ab] [a:invito] .
Classical
see 2, 67
Hoc, Quirites, multo est quaestuosiusquam si [p:ab] [a:invito] [v:sumeret] .
Classical
see 2, 71
Deinde emi iubet, [p:ab] [a:invito] [v:vetat] .
Classical
p.3
In qua quaestionedolor [v:elicere] veram vocem possit etiam [p:ab] [a:invito] .
Classical
see 66, 14
Quia nihil honestum est [s:quod] [p:ab] [a:invito] , quod a coacto [v:fit] .
Imperial
see 10, 675
[v:Iecit] [p:ab] [a:obliquo] nitidum iuvenaliter aurum.
Classical
see verse 121
Stultus, [p:ab] [a:obliquo] qui cum [v:descendere] possit.
Classical
see verse 732
Proxumam [v:esse] huic fundo [p:ad] [a:dextram] ?
Early
see verse 583
Ad sinistram hac recta platea, ubi ad Dianae veneris, [v:ito] [p:ad] [a:dextram] ; priu' quam ad portam venias, apud ipsum lacum est.
Early
see 7, 19, 1
Mystica [p:ad] [a:dextram] vada [v:praetervecti] .
Classical
see 3, 2, 2
[v:Sedebat] ad sinistram ei Cornelius Merula consulari familia ortus et Fircellius Pavo Reatinus, [p:ad] [a:dextram] [s:Minucius] Picaet M. Petronius Passer.
Classical
see 1, 69, 3
Sedubi paulatim retorqueri agmen [p:ad] [a:dextram] [v:conspexerunt] iamque primos superare regionem castrorum.
Classical
p.48
Nam et ante et pone et ad laevam et [p:ad] [a:dextram] et sursum et deorsum, modo huc, modo illuc.
Classical
see 2, 109, 3
Quod, cum Germaniam ad laevam et in fronte,Pannoniam [p:ad] [a:dextram] , a tergo sedium suarum [v:haberet] Noricos, tamquam in omnes.
Imperial
see 2, 59
[p:Ad] [a:dextram] [v:sunt] sub Alpibus Ligures, sub Appennino Etruria.
Imperial
see 2, 60
Patavium Antenoris, Mutina et Bononia, Romanorum coloniae, [p:ad] [a:dextram] [s:Capua] a Tuscis, et Roma quondam a pastoribus condita.
Imperial
see 3, 24
Sed ad sinistram amnis etiamnum et donec effluat Rhenus, [p:ad] [a:dextram] primo angustus et sui similis, post ripis longe ac late.
Imperial
see 3, 38
Contra os ipsum in Hyrcanium, ad sinistram in Scythicum, [p:ad] [a:dextram] in eumquem proprie totius nomine Caspium adpellant.
Imperial
see 11, 3, 114
Manum, sinister umerus proferendus, utcum capite [p:ad] [a:dextram] [v:ferente] consentiat.
Imperial
see 3, 5, 15
Intus axis, qui pro mensa sustinet rotam radiatam, itaut [p:ad] [a:extremum] , ubi orbile solet esse, arcuata tabula [v:cavata] sit.
Classical
see 10, 74
Ad quam harum duarum [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:additum] erit [s:hoc] 'ex quadam parte', poetica analogia erit.
Classical
see 1, 14, 7
Et si summatim, non particulatim narrabimus;et si non [p:ad] [a:extremum] , sed usque eo, quo opus erit, [v:persequemur] .
Classical
see 2, 2, 24
Pertinet ad confirmationem et ad confutationem. Deinde [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:docuimus] , cuiusmodi conclusionibus orationum uti oporteat.
Classical
see 2, 9, 1
Adprobatio est,qua [v:utimur] [p:ad] [a:extremum] confirmata suspicione.
Classical
see 2, 1, 28
Possum deinceps totam rem explicare,deinde [p:ad] [a:extremum] id quod accidit [v:dicere] .
Classical
see 2, 1, 126
[p:Ad] [a:extremum] petere [v:coepit] ne usque eo suam auctoritatem despiceret.
Classical
see 2, 1, 148
Sermonem atque existimationem contempserit, [s:qui] etiam [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:adscripserit] .
Classical
see 2, 2, 61
Utrum res ab initio ita ducta estan [p:ad] [a:extremum] ita [v:perducta] , an ita parva est pecunia, an is homo Verres ut haec quae dixi gratiis facta esse videantur?
Classical
see 2, 2, 172
[p:Ad] [a:extremum] vero, cum iste iam decedebat, eius modi litteras ad eos [v:misit] .
Classical
see 2, 3, 128
Nec posteritatis habitam esse rationem, cognoscitequid [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:scribat] [s:Metellus] .
Classical
see 2, 25
qui cum res tristissimas portendi dixerunt, [v:addunt] [p:ad] [a:extremum] omnia levius casurarebus divinis procuratis.
Classical
see 2, 85
Declarant, honestum hominem et nobilem, somniis crebris, [p:ad] [a:extremum] etiam minacibuscum iuberetur certo in loco silicem caedere.
Classical
see 3, 20
Deinceps cum officio selectio, deinde ea perpetua,tum [p:ad] [a:extremum] constansconsentaneaque naturae, in qua primum inesse incipit.
Classical
see 4, 32
Nulla profecto est,quin suam vim [v:retineat] a primo [p:ad] [a:extremum] . quo modo igitur evenit, ut hominis natura sola esset.
Classical
see 5, 26
Crescendumque valeant,ut in suo genere [v:perveniant] [p:ad] [a:extremum] .
Classical
see 5, 84
'Tria genera bonorum'; proclivi currit oratio. [v:Venit] [p:ad] [a:extremum] ; haeret in salebra.
Classical
see 1, 1, 46
Et ipse in scribendo sum saepe longior.Illud te [p:ad] [a:extremum] et [v:oro] et [v:hortor] ut, tamquam poetae boni et actores industrii solent, sic tu in extrema parte et conclusione muneris ac negoti tui diligentissimus sis.
Classical
see 18, 1
Cui consuli non animus ab initio,non [s:fides] [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:defuit] .
Classical
see 99, 10
Saepe adsentetur et litigare se simulans blandiatur atque [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:det] manusvincique se patiatur.
Classical
see 13, 7
Si liberum vestrum iudicium fuissetnec totiens dilata res nec [p:ad] [a:extremum] e manibus [v:erepta] , restituissetis, id quod cupiebatis, vestram auctoritatem, iis per quos erat amissa revocatis.
Classical
p.47
Deinde idquod proponendum fuit permotis animis [v:iacit] [p:ad] [a:extremum] .
Classical
p.122
Si plane causam redarguendo explicarit,enumeratione ut quidque diluerit et miseratione [p:ad] [a:extremum] .
Classical
see 1, 94
Ingressus cursus accubitio inclinatio sessio conprehensio, [p:ad] [a:extremum] etiam sermo et oratio.
Classical
see 2, 118
Nostri putant id de quo Panaetium addubitare dicebantut [p:ad] [a:extremum] omnis [s:mundus] [v:ignesceret] .
Classical
p.6
Contraria sint taciti cogitationi vestrae subiciatissed [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:exspectetis] meque meum dicendi ordinem servare patiamini.
Classical
p.50
Denique omnis accusatio varie graviterque [v:tractata] [p:ad] [a:extremum] manifesta veneni deprehensione conclusa est.
Classical
see 1, 90
Confirmare et, quod contra diceretur, refellere, [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:deprecari] aliquidet conqueri, quibus in rebus omnis
Classical
see 1, 142
Vestire atque ornare oratione; post memoria saepire; [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:agere] cum dignitate ac venustate.
Classical
see 2, 79
Deinde ornare verbis, post memoriae mandare,tum [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:agere] ac pronuntiare; rem sane non reconditam; quis enim
Classical
see 2, 158
[p:Ad] [a:extremum] [s:ipsi] se [v:compungunt] suis acuminibus.
Classical
p.174
Primum ergo origo, deinde causa, post natura,tum [p:ad] [a:extremum] [s:usus] ipse [v:explicetur] orationis aptae atque numerosae.
Classical
p.199
Verborum illa comprehensio et tota a capite ita fluere,ut [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:veniens] [s:ipsa] consistat.
Classical
p.201
Ut iam a principio videndum sitquemadmodum velis [v:venire] [p:ad] [a:extremum] .
Classical
p.39
[s:Nudus] atque [s:egens] [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:fugit] e regno.
Classical
see 13, 45
Sed iam se conligit et [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:incipit] philosophari.
Classical
p.100
Quo modo tardiores sunt et [s:principiis] rerum [v:neglectis] [p:ad] [a:extremum] ipsa denique necessitate excitantur.
Classical
p.41
In qua [s:laus] aequitatis, integritatis, facilitatis [p:ad] [a:extremum] ludorum voluptate [v:concluditur] .
Classical
p.27
Contra suum Clodium primum simulate, deinde non libenter, [p:ad] [a:extremum] tamen pro Cn. Pompeio vere vehementerque [v:pugnavit] .
Classical
p.78
Deinde [p:ad] [a:extremum] neque se neque generum neque conlegam suum tribuno plebis [v:defuturum] .
Classical
see 3, 12
Introductus, cum primo impudenter respondere coepisset, [p:ad] [a:extremum] nihil ex eis quae Galli insimulabant [v:negavit] .
Classical
see 1, 100
Sed suum illud, nihil ut adfirmet, [v:tenet] [p:ad] [a:extremum] ; nos autem teneamus, ut nihil censeamus esse malum.
Classical
see 1, 84
Peloponnesiaco bello multaque fecisset egregie, [v:vertit] [p:ad] [a:extremum] omnia, cum consilio non paruit eorum.
Classical
see 3, 89
In utramque partem disputat,sed tamen [p:ad] [a:extremum] utilitate, ut putat, officium [v:dirigit] magis quam humanitate.
Classical
see 3, 90
Si nihil proficiet, accusabit, minabitur etiam; [p:ad] [a:extremum] , si ad perniciem patriae res spectabit, patriae salutem [v:anteponet] saluti patris.
Classical
p.16
Ab equitibus Romanis, rogari ab Italia cuncta, deinde [s:ipse] [p:ad] [a:extremum] pro mea vos salute non [v:rogavit] solum.
Classical
see 1, 29
Quam in aliam rem transeatur, ne ab ultimo repetatur,ne [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:prodeatur] , ne quid, quod ad rem pertineat, praetereatur.
Classical
see 2, 3, 3
Ac πολιτείαν, in qua Σωκρατικῶς εἰς ἑκάτερον,sed tamen [p:ad] [a:extremum] , ut illi solebant, τὴν ἀρέσκουσαν.
Classical
see 2, 21, 2
Sed cum diu occulte suspirassent, postea iam gemere, [p:ad] [a:extremum] vero loqui [s:omnes] et clamare [v:coeperunt] .
Classical
see 2, 22, 2
Multa dixisset, aiebat illum primo sane diu multa contra, [p:ad] [a:extremum] autem manus [v:dedisse] et adfirmasse nihil se contra eius voluntatem esse facturam.
Classical
see 2, 24, 3
[v:Addidit] [p:ad] [a:extremum] , cum iam dimissa contione revocatus a Vatinio fuisset, se audisse ex Curione his de rebus conscium esse Pisonem.
Classical
see 9, 10, 7
Multa disputas huic sententiae convenientia.inde [p:ad] [a:extremum] : '"quid si" inquis "Lepidus et Vulcatius discedunt?"
Classical
p.28
Decimo vero loco testis exspectatus et [p:ad] [a:extremum] reservatus [v:dixit] , senator populi Romani, splendor ordinis.
Classical
see 8, 8, 3
Ignorans [v:pronuntiavit] quid singuli ordines iudicassent et [p:ad] [a:extremum] , ut solent, 'non redigam.'
Classical
see 2, 10, 4
[p:Ad] [a:extremum] musculi tectum trabesque extremas quadratas regulas IIII patentis digitos [v:defigunt] .
Classical
see 3, 3, 4
Maiori tamen parti placuithoc [v:reservato] [p:ad] [a:extremum] [s:consilio] interim rei eventum experiri et castra defendere.
Classical
see 4, 4, 1
Qui complures annos Sueborum vim sustinuerunt, [p:ad] [a:extremum] tamen agris [v:expulsi] .
Classical
see 2, 1115-1117
Et ignem ignes procudunt aetheraque aether,donique [p:ad] [a:extremum] crescendi perfica finem omnia [v:perduxit] rerum [s:natura] .
Classical
see 1, 1, 9
'Solve senescentem mature sanus equum,ne peccet [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:ridendus] et ilia ducat.'
Classical
see 1, 9, 28
Rogabitne [v:sit] [p:ad] [a:extremum] Caesaris [s:ira] tenax.
Classical
see 3, 7, 20
Venimus in Geticos fines: moriamur in illis, [s:Parca] que [p:ad] [a:extremum] qua mea coepit [v:eat] !
Classical
see 3, 23
Fames postremo inde detraxit hostem, quapostquam [v:ventum] [p:ad] [a:extremum] est, inermes nudique omnes sub iugum ab Tusculanis missi.
Classical
see 9, 8
Exercitum populi Romani poenam ullam meritos esse,neque [p:ad] [a:extremum] , cum sacrosancti essent, [v:dedi] hostibus violarive posse.
Classical
see 22, 23
Dubio quia non exspectata in eo senatus auctoritas est, [p:ad] [a:extremum] haud ambigue in maximam laudem [v:verso] .
Classical
see 23, 2
Senatu traderet Capuam Poenis,improbus homo sed non [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:perditus] .
Classical
see 23, 5
Quod foedus aequum [v:deditis] , quod leges vestras, quod [p:ad] [a:extremum] , id quod ante Cannensem certe cladem maximum fuit.
Classical
see 26, 13
Perpessi, circa vallum ac fossas saepe trucidati acprope [p:ad] [a:extremum] castris [v:exuti] .
Classical
see 34, 3
Quid? si carpere singula et extorquere et [v:exaequari] [p:ad] [a:extremum] viris patiemini, tolerabiles vobis eas fore creditis?
Classical
see 34, 41
Cunctatum, quia Aetolorum auxilia expectasset, [v:coactum] [p:ad] [a:extremum] acie confligere impetu in pabulatores suos.
Classical
see 36, 28
Et varie ad mitigandam iram victoris compositamita [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:finivit] , ut diceret Aetolos se suaque omnia fidei populi Romani permittere.
Classical
see 38, 58
Temperantiae fideique specimen illis gentibus dedissent, [p:ad] [a:extremum] ambo pro republica mortem [v:occubuisse] .
Classical
see 41, 2
Fugientes conatusnec imperio nec auctoritate nec precibus [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:valuisset] .
Classical
see 41, 10
M. Iunio, quod se dedecoris socium collegae fecisset, [p:ad] [a:extremum] utrumque decedere provincia [v:iussit] .
Classical
see 42, 23
Iniusta arma pio iustoque se tutarentur bello;vel [p:ad] [a:extremum] si gratia plus quam veritas apud eos [v:valeret] .
Classical
see 42, 50
Statuere apud animum suum Persea debere, utrum singula concedendo [v:nudatus] [p:ad] [a:extremum] opibus extorrisque regnoSamothraciam aliamve quam insulam petere ab Romanis.
Classical
see 38, 1
Commeatibus per municipia et colonias dispositis, [p:ad] [a:extremum] vota pro itu et reditu suo [v:suscipi] passus.
Imperial
see 19, 1
Integri, item Asini Epicadi ex gente Parthina ibridae, [p:ad] [a:extremum] Telephi, mulieris servi nomenculatoris.
Imperial
see 1, 46, 19
Ac licentia corrupti, ad seditiones et discordias et [p:ad] [a:extremum] bella civilia [v:ruebant] .
Imperial
see 3, 22, 21
Verus primi pili centurio multa cum hostium strage et [p:ad] [a:extremum] moriens [v:servaverat] .
Imperial
see 7, 26, 2
[s:Is] [v:est] [p:ad] [a:extremum] tenuis, in semicirculi speciem retusae latitudinis.
Imperial
see 9, 1, 38
Aut utrumque, aut adiungitur idem iteratum aut [s:idem] [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:refertur] , aut continenter unum verbum non eadem sententia.
Imperial
see 5, 5, 5
Primum librum quem de sceleribus eius ediderat,eumque [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:revolvisse] .
Imperial
see 9, 19, 1
Quod vetuerit omnino monumentum sibi fieri,meque [p:ad] [a:extremum] quid de utroque sentiam [v:consulis] .
Imperial
see 6, 11, 5
Probra quaedam alia ludibriosa et turpia ingessisset, [p:ad] [a:extremum] hoc [v:addidit] .
Imperial
p.17
Respectis in alteram partem rigorem mittere, qui,cum [p:ad] [a:extremum] [v:pervenerit] , parallelon primi rigoris excipiat
Imperial
see 1, 986-988
Iam copia materiai /undique ponderibus solidis [v:confluxet] [p:ad] [a:imum] / nec res ulla geri sub caeli tegmine posset.
Classical
see 42, 20
Tota [p:ad] [a:imum] fulmine [v:discussa] est.
Classical
see 44, 9
Testudini iniecta imbris in modum lubrico fastigio [s:innoxia] [p:ad] [a:imum] [v:labebantur] .
Classical
see verse 126
Et audes personam formare novam, [v:servetur] [p:ad] [a:imum] , qualis ab incepto processerit, et sibi constet.
Classical
see 9, 1, 8
Quid [v:perlucentis] [p:ad] [a:imum] aquaset circumfluentis ipsa convivia, quid epulas loquar scaena sua dignas?
Imperial
see 3, praef. 8
Habebunt suum, non tuum finem. Quid iaces? [p:Ad] [a:imum] [v:delatus] es, nunc locus est resurgendi.
Imperial
see 4, praef. 22
Ex quo liquere mortalibus possetquam velox foret [p:ad] [a:imum] [v:lapsus] e summo quamque diversa via magnam potentiam fortuna destrueret.
Imperial
see 2, 9, 4
Ea enim cum suo quoque tempore [p:ad] [a:imum] [v:perforata] castrantur, profundunt e medullis quem habent in se superantem.
Classical
see 7, 8, 3
Si ibi auri scripulum inponatur, non natabit, sed [p:ad] [a:imum] per se [v:deprimetur] .
Classical
see verse 907
Profecto [p:ad] [a:incitas] lenonem [v:rediget] , si eas abduxerit.
Early
see verse 536-537
Em nunc hic quoius est, /ut [p:ad] [a:incitas] [v:redactust] .
Early
see 7, 18, 12
Sed occipiens a capite, immo vero et ipsis auribustotum me [v:compilabat] [p:ad] [a:incitas] fusti grandissimo, donec fomenti vice ipsae me plagae suscitarent.
Imperial
see verse 240
Ettemplum Cereris [p:ad] [a:laevam] [v:adspice] .
Early
see verse 361
Scel. Quamnam ob rem? Pal. [v:Respice] dum [p:ad] [a:laevam] : quis illaec est mulier?
Early
see verse 1216
Acr. Ubi est? Milph. [p:Ad] [a:laevam] . Acr. Video.
Early
see verse 629-630
Nixi properiter navem in fugam / [v:transdunt] subter saxa [p:ad] [a:laevam] .
Early
see 55, 3
Locus, quod Tullianum appellatur,ubi paululum [v:ascenderis] [p:ad] [a:laevam] , circiter duodecim pedes humi depressus.
Classical
p.25
Hanc autem citimam a mediana linea [v:direxit] [p:ad] [a:laevam] .
Classical
p.48
Nam et ante et pone et [p:ad] [a:laevam] et ad dextram et sursum et deorsum, modo huc, modo illuc.
Classical
see 1, 14
Vastatur agri quod inter urbem ac Fidenas est;inde [p:ad] [a:laevam] [v:versi] quia dextra Tiberis arcebat, cum magna trepidatione agrestium populantur.
Classical
see 21, 31
Iam Alpes peteret, non recta regione iter instituitsed [p:ad] [a:laevam] in Tricastinos [v:flexit] .
Classical
see 28, 5
Quae ab Demetriaco sinu Chalcidem et Euripum petenti [p:ad] [a:laevam] prima urbium Euboeae [v:posita] est.
Classical
see verse 1-2
'Caput [p:ad] [a:laevam] ' didicit, glossemata nobis praecipit: os nullum vel potius pugilis.
Classical
see 1, 102
Extentus, sinuatus cetera, sedquia contra minus quam [p:ad] [a:laevam] et dextram [v:abscessit] , mollibusque fastigiis donec angustos utrimque angulos faciat inflectitur.
Imperial
see 3, 69
Iugum ingens, iterum rectus solidusque descendit,donec [p:ad] [a:laevam] dextramque se [v:diducens] duobus ostiis longe distantibus.
Imperial
see 12, 172-175
Limina dextrae / servabis portae, Nero;tu [v:converte] cohortes / [p:ad] [a:laevam] patrias et Larinatia signa, / clarum Volscorum, Tulli, decus.
Imperial
see 2, 109, 3
Eratque etiam eo timendus quod,cum Germaniam [p:ad] [a:laevam] et in fronte, Pannoniam ad dextram, a tergo sedium suarum [v:haberet] Noricos.
Imperial
see 5, 5, 6
Haec autemsi [s:qui] voluerit [p:ad] [a:perfectum] facile [v:perducere] , animadvertat in extremo libro diagramma musica ratione designatum.
Classical
see 49, 5
Unam quamlibet rem vix [p:ad] [a:perfectum] [v:perducit] assidua vigilia et intentio.
Imperial
see 71, 18
Academici veteres beatum quidem esse etiam inter hos cruciatus fatentur, sed non [p:ad] [a:perfectum] nec ad plenum, quod nullo modo potest recipi.
Imperial
see 2, 244
Hucager ille malus dulcesque a fontibus undae [p:ad] [a:plenum] [v:calcentur] .
Classical
see 1, 17, 15
Hic tibi copia / [v:manabit] [p:ad] [a:plenum] benigno / ruris honorum opulenta cornu.
Classical
see 71, 18
Academici veteres beatum quidem esse etiam inter hos cruciatus fatentur, sed non ad perfectum nec [p:ad] [a:plenum] , quod nullo modo potest recipe.
Imperial
see verse 525-526
Ubi nugivendis res soluta est omnibus, /ibi [p:ad] [a:postremum] [v:cedit] [s:miles] , aes petit.
Early
see verse 844
Sed [p:ad] [a:postremum] [s:nihil] [v:apparet] : male partum male disperit.
Early
see 4, 19, 23
Sed [p:ad] [a:postremum] continenter [v:revertimur] .
Classical
see 8, 43, 4
Cum pertinaciter resisterent oppidani, magna etiam parte amissa siti suorum in sententia permanerent, [p:ad] [a:postremum] cuniculis [s:venae] fontis [v:intercisae] suntatque aversae.
Classical
see 37, 5
[s:Religio] [p:ad] [a:postremum] [v:vicit] .
Classical
see 38, 16
Ut Syriae quoque [p:ad] [a:postremum] [s:reges] stipendium dare non [v:abnuerent] .
Classical
see 38, 56
Et [p:ad] [a:postremum] , cum auxilium L. Scipioni pollicetur, [v:adicit] tolerabilioris exempli esse a tribuno plebis.
Classical
see 7, 22, 5
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] [s:divitiae] meae [v:sunt] , tu divitiarum es.
Imperial
see 1, 84
Donec magis magisque [s:collecti] pauciores subinde et una [p:ad] [a:postremum] flamma [v:ardeant] .
Imperial
see 2, 55
Ut se per septem [p:ad] [a:postremum] ostia [v:effundat] .
Imperial
see 3, 16
Et quanto magis procedit eo latior fit, [p:ad] [a:postremum] magni freti similis.
Imperial
see 26, 7
Alibi ceu scabie aspera, [p:ad] [a:postremum] vero [v:nigrescente] et ad ossa carnes adprimente.
Imperial
see 2, 5
Meminissent modo tot proeliorum, quorum eventu et [p:ad] [a:postremum] [v:eiectis] Romanissatis probatum, penes utros summa belli fuerit.
Imperial
see 13, 22
Sed variis mox artibus elusus, [p:ad] [a:postremum] in urbe [v:retentus] est.
Imperial
see 13, 46
Post congressu et comitatu Otho,et [p:ad] [a:postremum] , ne in urbe aemulatus [v:ageret] .
Imperial
see 16, 21
Trucidatis tot insignibus viris [p:ad] [a:postremum] [s:Nero] virtutem ipsam excindere [v:concupivit] .
Imperial
see 1, 39, 8
Agitasse Laco ignaro Galba de occidendo Tito Vinio dicitur, sive ut poena eius animos militum mulceret, seu conscium Othonis credebat, [p:ad] [a:postremum] vel odio.
Imperial
see 2, 27, 4
Corrupta iurgiis aut rixis disciplina; [p:ad] [a:postremum] Valens e petulantia etiam perfidiam [v:suspectabat] .
Imperial
see 4, 16, 3
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] [s:gubernatores] [s:centuriones] que nisi eadem volentis, [v:trucidant] , donec universa quattuor et viginti navium classis transfugeret aut caperetur.
Imperial
see 8, 27, 17
Nonnumquam morsibus suos incursantes musculos [p:ad] [a:postremum] ancipiti ferro quod gerebant sua quisque brachia [v:disseccant] .
Imperial
see 9, 19, 10
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] tamen formidinem mortis [v:vicit] [s:aurum] .
Imperial
see 1, 2, 10.
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] cum concubitum filii petisset, ab eodem [v:interfecta] est.
Imperial
see 1, 7, 17
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] , ut adfirmationi suae fidem faceret, nudam sodali suo Gygi [v:ostendit] .
Imperial
see 2, 9, 18
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] morsu navem [v:detinuit] .
Imperial
see 2, 9, 19
Truncus [p:ad] [a:postremum] et velut rabida fera dentibus [v:dimicaverit] .
Imperial
see 2, 11, 18
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] non victi, sed vincendo fatigati inter ingentes stratorum hostium catervas [v:occiderunt] .
Imperial
see 3, 5, 15
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] tamen [s:victoria] Lacedaemoniorum [v:fuit] .
Imperial
see 3, 5, 15-
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] aequo Marte utrimque [v:discessum] .
Imperial
see 3, 6, 9
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] amisso Hamilcare imperatore cum exercitu aliquantisper [v:quievere] [s:victi] .
Imperial
see 4, 2, 7
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] [v:statuerunt] melius esse incessu regem quam imperio regnum claudicare.
Imperial
see 6, 2, 6
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] [s:ipse] ad eum [v:pergit] .
Imperial
see 6, 2, 12
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] etsi a multitudine [v:victus] , gloria tamen omnes vicit.
Imperial
see 12, 1, 11
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] cum verbis nihil [v:proficeret] , ad corripiendos seditionis auctores e tribunali in contionem armatam inermis ipse desiluit.
Imperial
see 12, 11, 8
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] corpus suum in Hammonis templum condi [v:iubet] .
Imperial
see 12, 15,7
[v:Victus] denique [p:ad] [a:postremum] est non virtute hostile.
Imperial
see 12, 16, 12
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] tamen Perdicca occiso ab exercitu hostis cum Pithone et lllyrio et Alceta, fratre Perdiccae, [v:appellatur] .
Imperial
see 13, 8, 10
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] cum Antigonum venire cum exercitu [v:nuntiatum] esset.
Imperial
see 14, 3, 1
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] adversus plebem nimio otio lascivientem auxilia a Timotheo, Atheniensium duce, mox ab Epaminonda Thebanorum [v:petivere] .
Imperial
see 16, 4, 3
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] dissimulato odio mitigatoque interim vultu fugam tacita [v:molitur] .
Imperial
see 18, 4, 9
Cum multis lacrimis et lamentatione flebili iuvocato [p:ad] [a:postremum] ituram se quo sua et urbis fata vocarent, [v:respondit] .
Imperial
see 18, 6, 5
Adsiduis belli certaminibus victus fractusque insidiis [p:ad] [a:postremum] suorum [v:interficitur] .
Imperial
see 20, 5, 14
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] inploratus Agathocles spe ampliandi regni a Sicilia in Italiam [v:traiecit] .
Imperial
see 23, 1, 17
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] etiam spoliata funeribus filiorum scissa veste et crinibus sparsis cum duobus servulis ex urbe protracta Samothraciam in exilium [v:abiit] .
Imperial
see 24, 3, 9
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] integris et intactis munimentis scrutantes potius quam diripientes castra [v:occupauerunt] .
Imperial
see 25, 2, 5
Intestina discordia vexati externis [p:ad] [a:postremum] bellis paene [v:consumpti] sunt.
Imperial
see 27, 3, 7
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] tamen petente eo indutiae duorum mensium [v:datae] .
Imperial
see 30, 3, 10
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] insidias sibi ab eo paratas [v:confingit] .
Imperial
see 32, 2, 9
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] tamen invicto animo inter confertissimos fortissime dimicans [v:cecidit] .
Imperial
see 35, 1, 11
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] tamen pacis simulatione deceptus [v:capitur] .
Imperial
see 36, 1, 5
Denique [p:ad] [a:postremum] non vi hostili [v:victus] .
Imperial
see 37, 1, 9
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] tamen, cum virtute hostes vincerent, metu suorum desertus [v:occiditur] .
Imperial
see 38, 10, 11
Malis premeretur [p:ad] [a:postremum] etiam ab uxore filiisque [v:deseritur] .
Imperial
see 39, 1, 7
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] in societatem eius [v:adsumptus] est.
Imperial
see 41, 5, 7
Indorumque bellis fatigati [p:ad] [a:postremum] ab invalidioribus Parthis velut exsangues [v:oppressi] sunt.
Imperial
see 41, 6, 3
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] [s:victoria] penes Parthos [v:fuit] .
Imperial
see 42, 2, 6
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] Artoadisti, Armeniorum regi, bellum [v:intulit] .
Imperial
see 42, 4, 8
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] in securos laetosque partem legionum [v:emisit] .
Imperial
see 42, 5, 5
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] Scythas precibus [v:fatigasset] .
Imperial
see 43, 2, 1
Post multos deinde huius urbis reges [p:ad] [a:postremum] Numitor et Amulius regno [v:potiti] sunt.
Imperial
see 43, 4, 4
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] adultis catulis fultam domestico praesidio proprietatem loci sibi [v:vindicasse] .
Imperial
see 44, 4, 2
Sed per omnes casus Fortuna quadam servatus [p:ad] [a:postremum] ad regnum tot periculorum miseratione [v:pervenit] .
Imperial
see 44, 4, 9
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] laqueo captus regi dono [v:datus] est.
Imperial
see 2, 29, 14
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] igitur [s:dominus] filio: "valeant" [v:inquit] "amici cum propinquis. Afferes primo luci falces duas
Imperial
see 3, 16, 10
Hisce [p:ad] [a:postremum] verbis [s:usus] [v:est] .
Imperial
see 14, 1, 27
[p:Ad] [a:postremum] autem ecquid [v:esset] [s:quod] adversum hoc dici posset, requirebat.
Imperial
see 6, 14
Ex quis Geminius prodigentia opum ac mollitia vitae amicus Seiano,nihil [p:ad] [a:serium] .
Imperial
see 1, 149
[p:Ad] [a:summam] , ne agam de singulis, totius generis hominum conciliationem et consociationem colere, tueri, [v:servare] debemus.
Classical
see 8, 14, 4
[p:Ad] [a:summam] [v:quaeris] quid putem futurum.
Classical
see 14, 14, 2
His de rebus velim cum Pomponio, cum Camillo, cum quibus vobis videbitur, consideretis, [p:ad] [a:summam] animo forti [v:sitis] .
Classical
see 7, 7, 7
[p:Ad] [a:summam] 'DIC, M. TVLLI.' [v:adsentior] Cn. Pompeio, id est T. Pomponio.
Classical
see 14, 1, 1
In sermonem se post Idus Martias praeterquam Lepido venisse nemini. [p:Ad] [a:summam] non posse istaec sic [v:abire] .
Classical
see 15, 1, 2
Primum quod attinet, nihil mihi concedebat,deinde [p:ad] [a:summam] arbitrum me [v:statuebat] non modo huius rei sed totius consulatus sui.
Classical
see 1, 1, 106-108
[p:Ad] [a:summam] : sapiens uno minor est Iove, dives, / liber, honoratus, pulcher, rex denique regum, / praecipue sanus, nisi cum pituita molesta est.
Classical
see 6, 21, 1
[p:Ad] [a:summam] consistant et opus suum intermittant.
Imperial
p.3
[p:Ad] [a:summam] , quis postea Thucydidis, quis Hyperidis ad famam [v:processit] ?
Imperial
p.31
[p:Ad] [a:summam] , statim [v:scietis] , ait, cui dederitis beneficium.
Imperial
p.37
[p:Ad] [a:summam] , mero meridie si dixerit illi tenebras esse, [v:credet] .
Imperial
p.37
[p:Ad] [a:summam] , quemvis ex istis babaecalis in rutae folium coniciet.
Imperial
p.38
[p:Ad] [a:summam] , parum illi bona lana nascebatur.
Imperial
p.45
[p:Ad] [a:summam] , omnes postea secti sunt.
Imperial
p.57
[p:Ad] [a:summam] , si circumminxero illum, nesciet qua fugiat.
Imperial
p.57
[p:Ad] [a:summam] , quisquam me bis poposcit?
Imperial
p.58
[p:Ad] [a:summam] , si quid vis, ego et tu sponsiunculam.
Imperial
p.71
[p:Ad] [a:summam] , omnes illos in testamento meo manu mitto.
Imperial
p.75
[p:Ad] [a:summam] , quotidie me solebam ad illum metiri.
Imperial
p.77
[p:Ad] [a:summam] , Scaurus cum huc venit, nusquam mavoluit hospitari, et habet ad mare paternum hospitium.
Imperial
p.105
[p:Ad] [a:summam] , adhuc patrimonii mei reliquias olent.
Imperial
p.134
[p:Ad] [a:summam] , qualem putas esse, qui de Circes toro sine voluptate surrexit?
Imperial
p.140
[p:Ad] [a:summam] , relinquere se pueros in domo Eumolpi, ut illum loquentem audirent.
Imperial
p.65
Cum [p:ad] [a:ultimum] animo [v:contendissemus] .
Classical
p.199
Atqueomnia illa et prima et media verba [v:spectare] debent [p:ad] [a:ultimum] .
Classical
see 2, 35
Ut in pecude, nisi, quae vis obstitit, [v:videmus] naturam suo quodam itinere [p:ad] [a:ultimum] pervenire.
Classical
see 1, 53
Vetant mirarisi, qualis in cives, qualis in socios, talis [p:ad] [a:ultimum] in liberos [v:esset] .
Classical
see 1, 54
Atque in expeditiones iret et dictis factisque omnibus ad fallendum instructis vana adcresceret fides, [s:dux] [p:ad] [a:ultimum] belli [v:legitur] .
Classical
see 2, 45
[s:Rem] [p:ad] [a:ultimum] seditionis [v:erupturam] , finemque venisse Romano imperio.
Classical
see 2, 56
Patres, [p:ad] [a:ultimum] dimicationis [v:rati] rem venturam, Ap. Claudium Appi filium, iam inde a paternis certaminibus invisum infestumque plebi, consulem faciunt.
Classical
see 3, 10
[v:Cessit] [p:ad] [a:ultimum] maiestati consulis [s:tribunus] et destitit.
Classical
see 3, 25
Tribuni suo more impedire dilectum,et forsitan [p:ad] [a:ultimum] [v:impedissent] .
Classical
see 3, 64
Quod [v:perseverarent] [p:ad] [a:ultimum] dissimiles decemvirorum esse.
Classical
see 3, 64
[s:Duillius] cum [p:ad] [a:ultimum] [v:perseverasset] negando quindecim tribunos plebei rem publicam habere posse.
Classical
see 5, 10
Quae nunc etiam vectigalis [p:ad] [a:ultimum] [v:facta] sit.
Classical
see 28, 39
Quam quod passi sumus ut [p:ad] [a:ultimum] fidem vobis [v:praestaremus] .
Classical
see 38, 24
Sanctitate et gravitate vitae huius matronalis facinorisdecus [p:ad] [a:ultimum] [v:conservavit] .
Classical
see 44, 4
Egregie [p:ad] [a:ultimum] in audaciter commisso [v:perseveravit] .
Classical
see 42, 43
Cum [v:experienda] [s:omnia] [p:ad] [a:ultimum] nec praetermittendam spem ullam censuisset rex.
Classical
see 45, 19
Sed Eumeni infesti stimulent eum, pietatem constantiamque laudaturos,si fidem [p:ad] [a:ultimum] fratri [v:praestitisset] .
Classical
see 2, 21, 50
Sed [p:ad] [a:ultimum] magno atrocique proelio cum Cinna [v:conflixit] .
Imperial
see 2, 48, 5
[p:Ad] [a:ultimum] saluberrimas et coalescentes condiciones pacis, quas et Caesar iustissimo animo postulabat et Pompeius aequo recipiebat.
Imperial
see 6, 12, 3
Non duratnec [p:ad] [a:ultimum] [v:exit] nisi lenta felicitas.
Imperial
see 4, 26, 3
[p:Ad] [a:ultimum] quid est dementius quam bilem in homines collectam in res effundere?
Imperial
see 3, 1, 7
Se sciret inexpugnabiles esse, [p:ad] [a:ultimum] pro fide [v:morituros] .
Imperial
see 3, 12, 20
Itaque orientem tam moderate et prudenter tulit, [p:ad] [a:ultimum] magnitudinem eius non [v:cepit] .
Imperial
see 4, 14, 19
Licet felicitas adspirare videatur,tamen [p:ad] [a:ultimum] temeritati non [v:sufficit] .
Imperial
see 4, 15, 10
Laeti, qui circa Sisigambim erant, vicisse Dareum, ingenti caede prostratos hostis, [p:ad] [a:ultimum] etiam inpedimentis exutos esse [v:nuntiant] .
Imperial
see 5, 1, 38
Summa quaeque amicula exuunt, paulatimque pudorem profanant, [p:ad] [a:ultimum] ,—honos auribus habitus sit,—ima corporum velamenta [v:proiciunt] .
Imperial
see 5, 3, 14
[p:Ad] [a:ultimum] victa litteris Alexandrum ita [v:deprecata] est.
Imperial
see 5, 6, 14
Erubuerunt non [v:sequi] primum amici, deinde copiarum duces, [p:ad] [a:ultimum] milites.
Imperial
see 5, 12, 11
"Ite", inquit, " [v:consulite] vobis [p:ad] [a:ultimum] regi vestro, ut decebat, fide exhibita".
Imperial
see 6, 3, 13
Quasi captivum in vinculis habuit, [p:ad] [a:ultimum] , ne a nobis conservari posset, [v:occidit] .
Imperial
see 6, 5, 2
Cum Ochio regnante exularet, et hospitii pignora in regem suum [p:ad] [a:ultimum] fides conservata [v:vincebat] .
Imperial
see 6, 5, 17
[p:Ad] [a:ultimum] circumire saltum milites [v:iubet] .
Imperial
see 6, 7, 10
[p:Ad] [a:ultimum] aversari scelus perseverantem mortis metu [v:terret] .
Imperial
see 7, 1, 8
Pauca ex iis, quae conposuerat, protulit, [p:ad] [a:ultimum] non memoria solum, sed etiam mens eum [v:destituit] .
Imperial
see 7, 3, 9
Ceterum structura latior ab imo paulatim incremento operis in artius cogitur, [p:ad] [a:ultimum] in carinae maxime modum [v:coit] .
Imperial
see 7, 11, 5
Arimazes loco fretus superbe multa respondit, [p:ad] [a:ultimum] , an Alexander etiam volare posset, [v:interrogat] .
Imperial
see 8, 1, 34
[p:Ad] [a:ultimum] "Si moriendum", [v:inquit] , "est pro te, Clitus est primus.
Imperial
see 8, 2, 17
[p:Ad] [a:ultimum] DCC suorum amissis, quorum CCC hostis cepit, [v:dedere] terga victoribus haud sane inulti.
Imperial
see 9, 10, 11
Consumptis igitur alimentis, Macedones primo inopiam,deinde [p:ad] [a:ultimum] famem sentire [v:coeperunt] .
Imperial
see 10, 1, 42
[p:Ad] [a:ultimum] tam ex toto ab semet ipso [v:degeneravit] ?
Imperial
see 10, 5, 24
[p:Ad] [a:ultimum] dolori [v:succubuit] .
Imperial
see 10, 6, 19
Quid ageret,incertus [p:ad] [a:ultimum] tamen [v:recessit] , et post eos, qui sederant proximi, constitit.
Imperial
see 10, 7, 12
[p:Ad] [a:ultimum] tamen in stirpem regiam [v:inclinavere] studiis.
Imperial
see 10, 9, 9
[p:Ad] [a:ultimum] [v:convenit] ut conprehenderentur tam seditiosae vocis auctores.
Imperial
see verse 660
[v:Eradicarest] certum [p:] [a:cumprimis] patrem.
Early
see verse 26
[v:Vellem] [p:] [a:cumprimis] fieri si forte potisset.
Early
p.22
Sed [p:] [a:cumprimis] [v:mirandum] est, quod ea, quae minime videri volunt nescire, discere tamen neglegunt et eiusdem artis disciplinam simul et ignorantiam detrectant.
Imperial
see 18, 4, 8
Nos deinde eum tenebamus urgebamusque, et [p:] [a:cumprimis] Apollinaris, ut de vocabulorum istorum uel differentia vel, si ei ita videretur, similitudine plenius apertiusque [v:dissereret] .
Imperial
see 13, 21, 25
Illud vero [p:] [a:cumprimis] apud Homerum veteres [s:grammatici] [v:adnotaverunt] , quod, cum dixisset quodam in loco κολοιούς τε ψῆράς τε, alio in loco non ψηρῶν, set ψαρῶν dixit.
Imperial
see 19, 5, 3
[v:Adhibebat] nobis auctoritates nobilium medicorum et [p:] [a:cumprimis] Aristotelis philosophi, rei omnis humanae peritissimi.
Imperial
see 1, 15, 8
[p:] [a:Cumprimis] autem M. [s:Cato] atrocissimus huiusce vitii insectator [v:est] .
Imperial
see 1, 13, 7
[p:] [a:cumprimis] autem respiciendum [v:putaverunt] ingeniumnaturamque illius, cuia res praeceptumque esset.
Imperial
see 13, 17, 2
Sic igitur eo verbo veteres esse usos et [p:] [a:cumprimis] M. Varronem Marcumque Tullium omnes ferme libri [v:declarant] .
Imperial
see 11, 3, 1
Scripta penitus noscenda et ad scientiam linguae Latinae [p:] [a:cumprimis] necessarias.
Imperial
p.6
L. Albius Sex. filius Quirina,vir bonus et [p:cum] [a:primis] honestus, una profectus est-Profectus est una L. Albius, homo cum primis honestus
Classical
see 1, 137
Venit ad Chelidonem C. Mustius, eques Romanus, publicanus,homo [p:cum] [a:primis] honestus.
Classical
see 2, 2, 68
Homo domi suae [p:cum] [a:primis] locuples atque honestus.
Classical
see 2, 3, 200
Homo [p:cum] [a:primis] prudens et domi nobilis.
Classical
p.10
Qui et domi suae [p:cum] [a:primis] honestus existimatus est.
Classical
see 2, 1
Crotoniatae quondam, cum florerent omnibus copiiset in Italia [p:cum] [a:primis] beati [v:numerarentur] , templum Iunonis, quod religiosissime colebant, egregiis picturis locupletare voluerunt.
Classical
see 2, 224
Sapiens videlicet homo [p:cum] [a:primis] nostrae civitatis [v:norat] hunc gurgitem.
Classical
p.205
[p:Cum] [a:primis] honestusidemque eruditissimus et Graecis litteris et Latinis.
Classical
p.224
Sed peracutus et callidus [p:cum] [a:primis] que ridiculus.
Classical
see 2, 147
Deinde consequentium rerum [p:cum] [a:primis] coniunctio et conprehensio [v:esset] in nobis.
Classical
see 1, 129-131
Et qua vi quaeque gerantur / in terris,tunc [p:cum] [a:primis] ratione sagaci / unde anima atque animi constet natura [v:videndum] .
Classical
see 1, 716-717
Quorum Acragantinus [p:cum] [a:primis] Empedocles [v:est] , / insula quem triquetris terrarum gessit in oris.
Classical
see 6, 938-940
Hoc pertinet ad res / noscere, [p:cum] [a:primis] hanc ad rem protinus ipsam, / qua de disserere adgredior.
Classical
see 6, 1222-1223
[p:Cum] [a:primis] fida canum vis / strata viis animam ponebat in omnibus aegre.
Classical
see 1, 178-180
[s:Area] [p:cum] [a:primis] ingenti [v:aequanda] cylindro/ et vertenda manu et creta solidanda tenaci, / ne subeant herbae neu puluere uicta fatiscat.
Classical
see 1, 57
Quo [p:cum] [a:primis] se intendentibus tenebris [v:pervenissent] , pergunt inde Collatiam.
Classical
see 1, 3, 4
An dissimiles colores sint, scire non possis,nisi [p:cum] [a:primis] extrema [v:contuleris] .
Imperial
see 16, 83
Ut amygdalae, fraxini, sabuci, morus autem novissima germinet, [p:cum] [a:primis] folia [v:demittat] .
Imperial
see 9, 360-362
S [v:tabat] [p:cum] [a:primis] mediae certamine pugnae/ aspera semper amans et par cuicumque periclo / Scaeuola.
Imperial
see 12, 7
[v:Diceret] suo more [p:cum] [a:primis] cui ulla fandi cura sit impensius cetero corpore os colendum.
Imperial
see 56, 3
Atqueego scio nonnullos et [p:cum] [a:primis] Aemilianum istum facetiae sibi habereres divinas deridere.
Imperial
see 61, 7
Id munus [p:cum] [a:primis] mihi gratum [v:fore] .
Imperial
see 5, 2
Non locum auctoritatem orationi derogare, sed [p:cum] [a:primis] [s:hoc] [v:spectandum] esse.
Imperial
see 7, 3
Sed [p:cum] [a:primis] Alexandri illud praeclarum, quod imaginem suam, quo certior posteris proderetur, [v:noluit] a multis artificibus vulgo contaminari.
Imperial
see 16, 36
Per quem postulabat locum celebrem statuae meae, [p:cum] [a:primis] [v:commemoravit] inter nos iura amicitiaea commilitio studiorum eisdem magistris honeste inchoata.
Imperial
see 18, 19
Protagora, qui sophista fuit longe multiscius et [p:cum] [a:primis] rhetoricae repertoribus perfacundus.
Imperial
see 7, 1
Hae [s:litterae] tuae [p:cum] [a:primis] indicio mihi [v:fuerunt] , quanto opere te diligam, cum magis perturbatus sum ad tuum quam ad filiae tuae periculum.
Imperial
see verse 533-534
An vero non iusta causa est, quor curratur celeriter / ubi bibas, [v:edas] [p:de] [a:alieno] quantum velis usque ad fatim.
Early
see 3, 24
Unde enim esset illa laus in summorum imperatorum incisa monumentis: finis imperii propagavit,nisi aliquid [p:de] [a:alieno] [v:accessisset] ?
Classical
see 2, 6, 5
Sedlex patri filium quia [p:de] [a:alieno] [v:consumit] abdicare permittit, hic de suo consumit.
Imperial
see 1 20, 3
Nam quemadmodum non est magni animiqui [p:de] [a:alieno] liberalis est.
Imperial
see 16, 7
Non est quod mireris animum meum:adhuc [p:de] [a:alieno] liberalis sum.
Imperial
see 304, 2
Tu [v:optas] numquam nisi [p:de] [a:alieno] , ego de meo.
Imperial
see 4, 13, 8
Namqui fortasse [p:de] [a:alieno] neglegentes, certe de suo diligentes erunt.
Imperial
see 9, 10
Si tam avarus es, computa;adhuc [p:de] [a:alieno] [v:vixi] .
Imperial
see verse 903
vidistinan [p:de] [a:audito] [v:nuntias] ?
Early
see verse 540
Quid si hisce inter se consenserunt, Callipho,see verse 540
aut [p:de] [a:compecto] [v:faciunt] consutis dolis, qui me argento intervortant ?
Early
see verse 484
Scivi extemplo [s:rem] [p:de] [a:compecto] [v:geri] .
Early
see verse 489
[s:Omnes] [p:de] [a:compecto] rem [v:agunt] , quasi in Velabro olearii.
Early
see verse 360
[p:De] [a:inproviso] nuptiae: non cohaerent.
Early
see verse 407-407
Nam ut numerabatur forte argentum, [v:intervenit] / [s:homo] [p:de] [a:inproviso] .
Early
see verse 417
Quasi [p:de] [a:inproviso] respice ad eum.
Early
see verse 610-610a
Hocin [p:de] [a:inproviso] mali mihi [v:obici] [s:tantum] / ut neque quid me faciam nec quid agam certu siem!
Early
see verse 884
Tantam [s:fortunam] [p:de] [a:inproviso] esse his [v:datam] !
Early
see verse 281
Ubi [p:de] [a:inproviso] st [v:interventum] mulieri.
Early
see verse 3
[p:De] [a:inproviso] [s:Chrysis] ubi me [v:aspexerit] .
Early
see verse 141-142
Et ecce [p:de] [a:inproviso] ad nos [v:accedit] cana [s:Veritas] , / Attices philosophiae alumna.
Classical
see 28, 1
Post cum armatis hominibus sicuti salutatum introire ad Ciceronem ac [p:de] [a:inproviso] domi suae inparatum [v:confodere] .
Classical
see 99, 1
Defessis iam hostibus ac paulo ante somno captis, [p:de] [a:inproviso] vigiles, item cohortium turmarum legionum tubicines simul omnis signa canere, milites clamorem tollere atque portis erumpere iubet.
Classical
p.151
Si qui ex acie fugerint [p:de] [a:improviso] [v:incidant] .
Classical
see 2, 3, 6
Telorum multa nostris [p:de] [a:improviso] imprudentibus atque impeditis vulnera [v:inferebant] .
Classical
see 5, 22, 1
Nuntios mittit atque eis imperat uti coactis omnibus copiiscastra navalia [p:de] [a:improviso] [v:adoriantur] atque oppugent.
Classical
see 5, 29,
Quam maximas manus possunt cogunt et [p:de] [a:improviso] ad Ciceronis hiberna [v:advolant] .
Classical
see 6, 3, 1
Proximis quattuor coactis legionibus [p:de] [a:improviso] in fines Nerviorum [v:contendit] .
Classical
see 7, 72, 1
Ne [p:de] [a:improviso] aut noctu ad munitiones hostium multitudo [v:advolaret] .
Classical
see 7, 80, 3
Ab his [s:complures] [p:de] [a:improviso] [v:vulnerati] proelio excedebant.
Classical
see 8, 36, 4
At Germanos equitesque imprudentibus omnibus [p:de] [a:improviso] [v:advolasse] proeliumque commisisse.
Classical
see 38, 4
Quae postquam ex sententia instruit,intempesta nocte [p:de] [a:improviso] multitudine Numidarum Auli castra [v:circumvenit] .
Classical
see 107, 6
Ac statim profecti,quia [p:de] [a:improviso] [v:acciderant] , dubio atque haesitante Iugurtha incolumes transeunt.
Classical
see verse 26-27
Posthac quas [v:faciet] [p:de] [a:integro] comoedias, / spectandae an exigendae sint vobis prius.
Early
see verse 174
Quoi [p:de] [a:integro] est [s:potestas] etiam [v:consulendi] quid velis.
Early
see verse 674
Ratio [p:de] [a:integro] [v:ineunda] st mihi.
Early
see verse 73
Gaudebam.ecce autem [p:de] [a:integro] !
Early
see 2, 2, 139
Censores dicit [p:de] [a:integro] sibi [v:creari] placere.
Classical
p.26
Ibi [p:de] [a:integro] funus iam sepulto filio [v:fecit] .
Classical
p.167
Cur non [p:de] [a:integro] autem [v:datum] ?
Classical
p.17
[v:Habetur] [p:de] [a:integro] [s:quaestio] ; nulla vis tormentorum acerrimorum praetermittitur
Classical
p.20
Cum haec disseruissem, uterque adsensus est; et [s:ego] tamquam [p:de] [a:integro] [v:ordiens] .
Classical
p.208
Cum unum corpus debeat esse defensionis, [v:nasci] [p:de] [a:integro] [s:causam] , cum sit ab altero perorata.
Classical
see 1, 131
Indidemque eadem aeque [v:oriuntur] [p:de] [a:integro] atque eodem occidunt.
Classical
see 13, 27, 1
Ita multa mutari voluntut mihi [p:de] [a:integro] [v:scribendi] causa non sit.
Classical
see 13, 51, 2
De Attica nunc demum mihi est exploratum;itaque ei [p:de] [a:integro] [v:gratulare] .
Classical
see 12, 30, 4
Quum levati morbo viderentur,in eum [p:de] [a:integro] [v:inciderunt] .
Classical
see 62, 9
Multis magnisque praesidiis nequiquam perditis [p:de] [a:integro] bellum [v:sumit] .
Classical
see 1, 19
Iure eam legibusque ac moribus [p:de] [a:integro] [v:condere] parat.
Classical
see 1, 3
Datoque spatio Romanis ad [v:comparandum] [p:de] [a:integro] [s:bellum] .
Classical
see 3, 9
Quam placatam reconciliatamque patribus [p:de] [a:integro] in antiqua [v:redigi] mala.
Classical
see 5, 5
Utad aestatem rursus novus [p:de] [a:integro] his instituendis [v:exsudetur] [s:labor] .
Classical
see 5, 17
[s:Auspicia] [p:de] [a:integro] [v:repeterentur] et interregnum iniretur.
Classical
see 6, 32
Parvo intervallo ad respirandum debitoribus dato, postquam quietae res ab hostibus erant, [v:celebrari] [p:de] [a:integro] iuris [s:dictio] et tantum abesse spes veteris levandi fenoris.
Classical
see 8, 2
Quoniam ipsos belli culpa sua contracti taedium ceperit, [s:amicitia] [p:de] [a:integro] [v:reconcilietur] .
Classical
see 9, 8
Ne quid divini humanive obstetquo minus iustum piumque [p:de] [a:integro] [v:ineatur] bellum.
Classical
see 21, 6
Tunc [v:relata] [p:de] [a:integro] [s:res] ad senatum est.
Classical
see 21, 8
Itaque acrius [p:de] [a:integro] coortum [v:est] bellum pluribusque partibus.
Classical
see 21, 8
Itaque aliud [p:de] [a:integro] [s:foedus] publico consilio [v:ictum] est.
Classical
see 21, 21
Aut iam exhaustos aut mox exhauriendos renovavit corpora animosquead [s:omnia] [p:de] [a:integro] [v:patienda] .
Classical
see 21, 25
[s:Iter] deinde [p:de] [a:integro] [v:coeptum] nec, dum per patentia loca ducebatur agmen, apparuit hostis.
Classical
see 21, 25
Id vero laboris velut [p:de] [a:integro] [s:initium] [v:fuit] .
Classical
see 22, 5
Et nova [p:de] [a:integro] [v:exorta] [s:pugna] est.
Classical
see 22, 9
[s:Id] non rite [v:factum] [p:de] [a:integro] atque amplius faciundum esse.
Classical
see 22, 14
Tum prope [p:de] [a:integro] [s:seditio] [ac de seditione] [v:accensa] .
Classical
see 23, 16
Plebesque Nolana [p:de] [a:integro] ad defectionem [v:spectaret] .
Classical
see 23, 20
Nec temere agendum consulendumque [p:de] [a:integro] [v:censuit] .
Classical
see 23, 26
In ipso impetu movendarum [p:de] [a:integro] rerum [v:perculit] .
Classical
see 24, 16
[s:Romani] insecuti novum [p:de] [a:integro] proelium [v:inclusi] hostium vallo ediderint.
Classical
see 24, 42
Animosquead [v:temptandum] [p:de] [a:integro] [s:certamen] fecit.
Classical
see 30, 34
Ita novum [p:de] [a:integro] [s:proelium] [v:ortum] est.
Classical
see 31, 6
In senatu tribunus plebis et consulem pro se quisque hortariut [p:de] [a:integro] comitia rogationi ferendae [v:ediceret] .
Classical
see 33, 40
In antiquum ius venisse etLysimachiam deletam Thracum impetu [p:de] [a:integro] [v:condere] , ut Seleucus filius eam sedem regni habeat.
Classical
see 34, 44
Deinde ex auctoritate collegii patribus renuntiasset, [p:de] [a:integro] faciendum arbitratu pontificum [v:censuerunt] .
Classical
see 37, 19
Si ita visum iis sit, penes quos potestas fuerit, [v:instauremus] novum [p:de] [a:integro] bellum.
Classical
see 38, 33
Priusquam alio [p:de] [a:integro] foedere [v:obligarentur] .
Classical
see 39, 4
Ubi incensis operibus alia [p:de] [a:integro] [v:facta] sint.
Classical
see 39, 24
Rediere deinde causae, [s:quae] [p:de] [a:integro] iram [v:moverent] in Romanos.
Classical
see 39, 44
Cum senatus precibus et lacrimis victus publicanorum induci et [p:de] [a:integro] [v:locari] iussisset.
Classical
see 40, 32
Nec usquam nisi in certamine spes,pertinacius [p:de] [a:integro] [v:capessunt] pugnam.
Classical
see 41, 25
Inde gravius [p:de] [a:integro] [s:bellum] [v:exarsit] .
Classical
see 42, 62
Unde profectus erat, redit,belli casum [p:de] [a:integro] [v:temptaturus] .
Classical
see 43, 2
Cum [v:dicenda] [p:de] [a:integro] [s:causa] esset, excusati exilii causa solum uertisse.
Classical
see 45, 36
Ut [p:de] [a:integro] eam rem [v:agerent] ab tribunis petere, dicendique sibi ad populum potestatem facerent.
Classical
see 45, 36
[s:Victi] auctoritatibus principum [p:de] [a:integro] [v:agere] coeperunt.
Classical
see 1, 3, 3
Quae aut elidant corpusaut [p:de] [a:integro] gravius [v:impellant] .
Imperial
see 8, 1, 4
Discussa enim quaestione aliam velut dis interpellantibus [p:de] [a:integro] [v:instaurari] non placuit.
Imperial
see 10, 4
Votorum tuorum veterum licet deis gratiam facias,alia [p:de] [a:integro] [v:suscipe] .
Imperial
see 3, 29, 9
Cum partes eius interire debuerint abolerique funditus totae,ut [p:de] [a:integro] totae [s:rudes] innoxiaeque [v:generentur] nec supersit in deteriora praecepto.
Imperial
see 4, 35, 1
Alioquin quidquid mutatur,libertatem facit [p:de] [a:integro] [v:consulendi] , et me fide liberat.
Imperial
see 2, 17, 2
Attamen pigriora sunt ista remedia,cum sit efficacissimum [p:de] [a:integro] locum [v:exarare] .
Imperial
see 4, 32, 3
Sed illud [p:de] [a:integro] [v:refodi] debet; hoc potest intercidi et disrarari, quod opus rustici stipationem vocant.
Imperial
see 9, 15, 1
Quod ubi factum est, cera per stramenta vel iuncos defusa colatur, atqueiterum similiter [p:de] [a:integro] [v:coquitur]
Imperial
see 2, 14, 59
At si tam neglegens ei stilus fuerit ut emendationem non recipiat,expertus sum prodesse quotiens eandem materiam rursus a me retractatam [v:scribere] [p:de] [a:integro] iuberem.
Imperial
see 9, 3, 37
Unde sumptum? Quae porro interceptio poculi?cur non [p:de] [a:integro] autem [v:datum] ?
Imperial
see 1, 40, 8
Igitur ut exstincta parum fideliter incendia maiore flamma reviviscunt,ita [s:ille] [p:de] [a:integro] , auctis maiorem in modum copiis, tota denique regni sui mole in Asiam rursus mari terra fluminibusque veniebat.
Imperial
see 1, 2
Nihil umquam prae vobis dulcius habui neque habere possum,tametsi alios annos totidem [p:de] [a:integro] , quantum vixi, [v:vivam] .
Imperial
see verse 317
Illic homo me interpolabitmeumque [s:os] [v:finget] [p:] [a:denuo] .
Early
see verse 923
Verumlubet etiam mi has [v:perlegere] [p:] [a:denuo] .
Early
see verse 33-34
Hanc graece [v:scripsit] , post id rursum [p:] [a:denuo] / Latine [s:Plautus] cum latranti nomine.
Early
see verse 856
Eundem ex confidente actutum [v:diffidentem] [p:] [a:denuo] .
Early
see verse 117
[v:Aedificantur] [s:aedes] totae [p:] [a:denuo] .
Early
see verse 222-223
Ni ob istam orationem / te [v:liberasso] [ [p:] [a:denuo] et ni Scapham enicasso.
Early
see verse 828
Iam ego tibi, si me inritassis,Persam [v:adducam] [p:] [a:denuo] .
Early
see verse 79
[v:Revertor] rursus [p:] [a:denuo] Carthaginem.
Early
see verse 1276-1277
Plaudunt et 'parum' clamitant mi, ut revertar. / [v:occepi] [p:] [a:denuo] , hoc modo.
Early
see verse 803-804
Aperi, deprome inde auri ad hanc rem quod sat est, /continuo [v:operito] [p:] [a:denuo] .
Early