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1 concursus
concursus ūs, m [concurro], a running together, concourse, throng, mob, tumult: hominum: concursūs facere: magni domum ad Afranium fiebant, Cs.: in forum a totā urbe, L.: ingens, V.: undique, H.: in oppido.—An assault, onset, attack, charge: exercitūs, Cs.: acerrimo concursu pugnare, N.: Ut nostris concursibus insonet aether, O.: concursūs philosophorum sustinere, assaults: caeli, thunder, O.—Fig., a dashing together, encountering, meeting, concourse, collision: nubila Excutiunt concursibus ignes, O.: fortuitus (atomorum): ut utraque (navis) ex concursu laborarent, Cs.: navium, L.: asper verborum, a harsh combination. — A combination, union, coincidence: studiorum: calamitatum.* * *running to and fro/together, collision, charge/attack; assembly/crowd; tumult; encounter; combination, coincidence; conjunction, juxtaposition; joint right -
2 cōnspīrātiō
cōnspīrātiō ōnis, f [conspiro], an agreement, union, unanimity, concord, harmony: hominum: bonorum omnium: civitatum, Ta.: amoris: in r<*> p. bene gerendā.—A plot, combination, conspiracy hominum contra dignitatem tuam: ista Sardorum body of conspirators: militaris, Ta.* * *illegal/hostile combination/conspiracy/plot; blowing/breathing together; concord/harmony/unanimity/agreement in feeling/opinion; conspirator -
3 complexio
I.Prop.A.In gen.:B.(atomorum),
Cic. Fin. 1, 6, 19.—Of the zodiac, App. de Mundo, p. 57, 37.—Esp., in late Lat., for a physical constitution or habit: bona, Firm. Math. 5, 9.—II.Trop.A. B.Esp.1.Of discourse:2.brevis totius negotii,
comprehension, comprisal, Cic. Inv. 1, 26, 37:mira verborum,
id. Phil. 2, 37, 95.—T. t.a.In rhet.(α).A period:(β).longissima est igitur complexio verborum, quae volvi uno spiritu potest,
Cic. de Or. 3, 47, 182:nec acervatim multa frequentans unā complexione devinciet,
crowd into one period, id. Or. 25, 85.—A rhetorical figure, according to which [p. 391] one constantly recurs to what has been previously said, Auct. Her. 4, 14, 20.—b.In philos. lang.(α).A conclusion in a syllogism, Auct. Her. 2, 18, 28; 2, 29, 40; Cic. Inv. 1, 37, 67; 1, 40, 72; 1, 47, 87; Quint. 5, 14, 5 sq.—(β).A dilemma, Cic. Inv. 1, 29, 45; Ascon. ad Div. in Caecil. 14, 45.—c.In gram., a contraction of two syllables into one, for the Gr. sunairesis and sunaloiphê (opp. divisio), Quint. 1, 5, 17; cf. id. 1, 5, 6. -
4 concursus
concursus, ūs, m. [concurro].I.A running or flocking together, a concourse, assembly:B.fit concursus per vias,
Plaut. Ep. 2, 2, 27; cf. in plur.:incredibilem in modum concursus fiunt ex agris,
Cic. Att. 5, 16, 3:magni domum concursus ad Afranium fiebant,
Caes. B. C. 1, 53:magni concursus sunt facti,
Nep. Phoc. 4, 1:concursus fit celeriter in praetorium,
Caes. B. C. 1, 76:in forum a totā urbe,
Liv. 2, 56, 13; Nep. Dat. 3, 3:ingens,
Verg. A. 9, 454: undique concursus, * Hor. S. 1, 9, 78:bonorum,
Cic. Cat. 1, 1, 1:facere,
id. Deiot. 10, 28; Liv. 27, 7, 1.—In partic., absol., an uproar, tumult:II.quem concursum in oppido factum putatis? quem clamorem?
Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 23, § 52; cf. id. Sull. 5, 15:quive coetu, concursu, turbā, seditione incendium fecerit,
Paul. Sent. 5, 26, 3; Dig. 48, 6, 5 pr.—A running or dashing together, a pressing, striking one upon another, an encountering, meeting; a concourse, etc.A.Of corporeal objects.1.In gen.:2.concursus, motus, etc. (corporum quorundam) efficiunt ignes,
Lucr. 1, 686; cf.:concursu suo nubes excussere semina ignis,
id. 6, 161; cf. also Ov. M. 11, 436:caeli,
id. ib. 15, 811:fortuito (atomorum),
Cic. N. D. 1, 24, 66; Quint. 7, 2, 2:navium,
Caes. B. C. 2, 6; Liv. 29, 27, 6; Suet. Ner. 34:lunae et solis,
conjunction, Cels. 1, 4: oris, a shutting (v. concurro, II. A. 1.), Quint. 11, 3, 56 Spald.:asper verborum,
a harsh combination, Cic. de Or. 3, 43, 171:extremorum verborum cum insequentibus,
id. Or. 44, 150:vocalium,
Quint. 9, 4, 33:quinque amnium in unum confluens,
Plin. 6, 20, 23, § 75.—Esp., milit. t. t., an onset, attack, charge:b.utriusque exercitus,
Caes. B. C. 3, 92; Nep. Cim. 2, 3; id. Iphic. 1, 4:acerrimo concursu pugnare,
id. Eum. 4, 1; id. Hann. 11, 4; Liv. 32, 30, 11; 42, 59, 4; Ov. M. 6, 695 et saep.:proelii,
Nep. Thras. 1, 4.—Transf.(α).Concursus omnium philosophorum sustinere, assaults, Cic. Ac. 2, 22, 70.—(β).Jurid. t. t., an equal claim, joint heirship, Dig. 32, 80; 39, 2, 15; 7, 2, 1 fin. —B.Of abstr. objects, a meeting together, union, combination:honestissimorum studiorum,
Cic. Fin. 2, 34, 111:calamitatum,
id. Fam. 5, 13, 2 (corresp. with vis tempestatum):ex rationis et firmamenti conflictione et quasi concursu quaestio exoritur,
id. Part. Or. 30, 104. -
5 conplexio
I.Prop.A.In gen.:B.(atomorum),
Cic. Fin. 1, 6, 19.—Of the zodiac, App. de Mundo, p. 57, 37.—Esp., in late Lat., for a physical constitution or habit: bona, Firm. Math. 5, 9.—II.Trop.A. B.Esp.1.Of discourse:2.brevis totius negotii,
comprehension, comprisal, Cic. Inv. 1, 26, 37:mira verborum,
id. Phil. 2, 37, 95.—T. t.a.In rhet.(α).A period:(β).longissima est igitur complexio verborum, quae volvi uno spiritu potest,
Cic. de Or. 3, 47, 182:nec acervatim multa frequentans unā complexione devinciet,
crowd into one period, id. Or. 25, 85.—A rhetorical figure, according to which [p. 391] one constantly recurs to what has been previously said, Auct. Her. 4, 14, 20.—b.In philos. lang.(α).A conclusion in a syllogism, Auct. Her. 2, 18, 28; 2, 29, 40; Cic. Inv. 1, 37, 67; 1, 40, 72; 1, 47, 87; Quint. 5, 14, 5 sq.—(β).A dilemma, Cic. Inv. 1, 29, 45; Ascon. ad Div. in Caecil. 14, 45.—c.In gram., a contraction of two syllables into one, for the Gr. sunairesis and sunaloiphê (opp. divisio), Quint. 1, 5, 17; cf. id. 1, 5, 6. -
6 G
G, g, indecl. n. or (on account of littera) f., had originally no place in the Latin alphabet: both the sharp and the flat guttural mutes, our k and g sounds, being represented by C; hence on the Columna Rostrata LECIONES, MACISTRATOS, EXFOCIONT, (pu)CNANDOD, PVCN(ad), CARTACINIENSIS, for legiones, etc.; hence, too, the archaic form ACETARE for agitare (v. Paul. ex Fest. p. 23 Müll. N. cr.), and the still common abbreviation of the names Gaius and Gneus in C and Cn.—At a later period (acc. to Plut. Qu. Rom. p. 277 D and 278 E, by means of a freedman of Spurius Carvilius Ruga, about the beginning of the second Punic war) a slight graphic alteration was made in the C, which introduced into the Roman orthography the letter G (on the old monuments C); thus we have in the S. C. de Bacchanal.: MAGISTER, MAGISTRATVM, FIGIER, GNOSCIER, AGRO; on the other hand, the orthography GNAIVOD PATRE PROGNATVS on the first Epitaph of the Scipios, which dates before that time, indicates either incorrectness in the copying or a later erection of the monument. When Greek words are written in Latin letters and vice versa, G always corresponds to G. Its sound was always hard, like Engl. g in gate, at least until the sixth century A. D.As an initial, g, in pure Latin words, enters into consonantal combination only with l and r; and therefore in words which, from their etymology, had the combination gn, the g was rejected in the classical period, and thus arose the class. forms nascor, natus, nosco, novi, notus, narus, navus, from the original gnascor, gnatus, gnosco, etc. (cf. the English gnaw, gnat, gnarr, etc., where the g has become silent); whereas in compounds the g again is often retained: cognatus, cognosco, ignarus, ignavus.—An initial g is dropped in lac (kindred to GALACT, gala), likewise in anser (kindred to Germ. Gans; Sanscr. hansa; Greek chên).As a medial, g combines with l, m, n, r, although it is sometimes elided before m in the course of formation; so in examen for exagmen from agmen; in contamino for contagmino (from con-TAG, tango). Before s the soft sound of g passes into the hard sound of c, and becomes blended with the s into x (v. the letter X); though sometimes the g (or c) is elided altogether, as in mulsi from mulgeo, indulsi from indulgeo; cf.: sparsus, mersus, tersus, etc. So too before t, as indultum from indulgeo. The medial g is often dropped between two vowels, and compensated for by lengthening the preced. vowel: māior from măgior, pulēium from pulēgium, āio from ăgio (root AG, Sanscr. ah, to say; cf. nego). Likewise the medial g is dropped in lēvis for legvis, Sanscr. laghn, fava for fagva, fruor for frugvor, flamma for flagma, stimulus for stigmulus, examen for exagmen; jumentum, from root jug-: sumen from sug-; cf.: umor, flamen, etc.As a final, g was only paragogic, acc. to Quint. 1, 7, 13, in the obsolete VESPERVG (for vesperu, analogous with noctu; v. Spald. ad loc.). Etymologically, g corresponds to an original Indo - European g or gh, or is weakened from c, k. Thus it stands where in Greek we have:(α).g, as ago, agô; ager, agros; argentum, arguros; genus, genos; fulgeo, phlegô, and so very commonly;(β).ch (usually before r, or in the middle of a word): ango, anchô; rigo, brechô; gratus, chairô, etc.;(γ).k: viginti, eikosi; gubernator, kubernêtês; gummi, kommi, etc.—By assimilation, g was produced from b and d in oggero, suggero, aggero, etc., from obgero, sub-gero, ad-gero, etc.As an abbreviation, G denotes Galliarum, Gallica, gemina, Germania, genius, etc.; and sometimes Gaius (instead of the usual C); v. Inscr. Orell. 467; 1660; 4680:G.P.R.F. genio populi Romani feliciter,
Inscr. Orell. 4957; v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 76 sqq.; Roby, Lat. Gr. 1, 38 sqq. -
7 g
G, g, indecl. n. or (on account of littera) f., had originally no place in the Latin alphabet: both the sharp and the flat guttural mutes, our k and g sounds, being represented by C; hence on the Columna Rostrata LECIONES, MACISTRATOS, EXFOCIONT, (pu)CNANDOD, PVCN(ad), CARTACINIENSIS, for legiones, etc.; hence, too, the archaic form ACETARE for agitare (v. Paul. ex Fest. p. 23 Müll. N. cr.), and the still common abbreviation of the names Gaius and Gneus in C and Cn.—At a later period (acc. to Plut. Qu. Rom. p. 277 D and 278 E, by means of a freedman of Spurius Carvilius Ruga, about the beginning of the second Punic war) a slight graphic alteration was made in the C, which introduced into the Roman orthography the letter G (on the old monuments C); thus we have in the S. C. de Bacchanal.: MAGISTER, MAGISTRATVM, FIGIER, GNOSCIER, AGRO; on the other hand, the orthography GNAIVOD PATRE PROGNATVS on the first Epitaph of the Scipios, which dates before that time, indicates either incorrectness in the copying or a later erection of the monument. When Greek words are written in Latin letters and vice versa, G always corresponds to G. Its sound was always hard, like Engl. g in gate, at least until the sixth century A. D.As an initial, g, in pure Latin words, enters into consonantal combination only with l and r; and therefore in words which, from their etymology, had the combination gn, the g was rejected in the classical period, and thus arose the class. forms nascor, natus, nosco, novi, notus, narus, navus, from the original gnascor, gnatus, gnosco, etc. (cf. the English gnaw, gnat, gnarr, etc., where the g has become silent); whereas in compounds the g again is often retained: cognatus, cognosco, ignarus, ignavus.—An initial g is dropped in lac (kindred to GALACT, gala), likewise in anser (kindred to Germ. Gans; Sanscr. hansa; Greek chên).As a medial, g combines with l, m, n, r, although it is sometimes elided before m in the course of formation; so in examen for exagmen from agmen; in contamino for contagmino (from con-TAG, tango). Before s the soft sound of g passes into the hard sound of c, and becomes blended with the s into x (v. the letter X); though sometimes the g (or c) is elided altogether, as in mulsi from mulgeo, indulsi from indulgeo; cf.: sparsus, mersus, tersus, etc. So too before t, as indultum from indulgeo. The medial g is often dropped between two vowels, and compensated for by lengthening the preced. vowel: māior from măgior, pulēium from pulēgium, āio from ăgio (root AG, Sanscr. ah, to say; cf. nego). Likewise the medial g is dropped in lēvis for legvis, Sanscr. laghn, fava for fagva, fruor for frugvor, flamma for flagma, stimulus for stigmulus, examen for exagmen; jumentum, from root jug-: sumen from sug-; cf.: umor, flamen, etc.As a final, g was only paragogic, acc. to Quint. 1, 7, 13, in the obsolete VESPERVG (for vesperu, analogous with noctu; v. Spald. ad loc.). Etymologically, g corresponds to an original Indo - European g or gh, or is weakened from c, k. Thus it stands where in Greek we have:(α).g, as ago, agô; ager, agros; argentum, arguros; genus, genos; fulgeo, phlegô, and so very commonly;(β).ch (usually before r, or in the middle of a word): ango, anchô; rigo, brechô; gratus, chairô, etc.;(γ).k: viginti, eikosi; gubernator, kubernêtês; gummi, kommi, etc.—By assimilation, g was produced from b and d in oggero, suggero, aggero, etc., from obgero, sub-gero, ad-gero, etc.As an abbreviation, G denotes Galliarum, Gallica, gemina, Germania, genius, etc.; and sometimes Gaius (instead of the usual C); v. Inscr. Orell. 467; 1660; 4680:G.P.R.F. genio populi Romani feliciter,
Inscr. Orell. 4957; v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 76 sqq.; Roby, Lat. Gr. 1, 38 sqq. -
8 coitiō
coitiō ōnis, f [coëo], a coming together, meeting: prima, T.: absterrere singulos a coitionibus, L.—A conspiracy, plot, coalition: suspitio coitionis: coitiones tribunorum adversus inventutem, L.: coitionem facere.* * *meeting, encounter; assemblage; conspiracy, plot, coalition; partnership; combination; physical/chemical union of elements; (late) sexual intercourse -
9 comitātus
comitātus adj. with comp. [P. of comito], attended, escorted, accompanied: parum, with few attendants: bene: puero ut uno esset comitatior, that his train was increased by, etc.* * *Icomitata -um, comitatior -or -us, comitatissimus -a -um ADJaccompanied (by/in time); (COMP) better attended, having a larger retinueIIcompany of soldiers/mercenaries; war band; company/throng/crowd; rank and file; escort/retinue (of slaves/clients); court of a king; combination, association; county (Cal) -
10 comitātus
comitātus ūs, m [comitor], an escort, train, retinue, suite: delicatus ancillarum: proficisci cum magno comitatu: praedonis: equitum: gradūs ipse comitatus habet, Ta.: Irae Insidiaeque dei comitatus, V.—Fig.: quid tanto virtutum comitatu (opus est) si? etc. — A company, band, troop, crowd, swarm: Allobrogum comitatūs deprehendere, i. e. the Allobroges and their train, S.: magnum comitatum circumventum interficere, L.* * *Icomitata -um, comitatior -or -us, comitatissimus -a -um ADJaccompanied (by/in time); (COMP) better attended, having a larger retinueIIcompany of soldiers/mercenaries; war band; company/throng/crowd; rank and file; escort/retinue (of slaves/clients); court of a king; combination, association; county (Cal) -
11 complexiō (conp-)
complexiō (conp-) ōnis, f [PARC-, PLEC-], a combination, association: cumulata bonorum.— Of discourse, a summing up, comprehension: brevis totius negotii.—A sentence, period, expression: mira verborum.—In philosophy, a conclusion in a syllogism.—In rhetoric, a dilemma. -
12 cōnexus
-
13 congressus
congressus P. of congredior.* * *meeting, interview; assembly/conference; encounter; engagement, clash; contest; union, combination, coming together; sexual/social intercourse; companionship -
14 congressus
congressus ūs, m [com- + GRAD-], a meeting, assembly, conference, conversation, interview: congressum tuum fugiunt: ad congressum eius pervenire: cum illis sermone et congressu coniungi: congressu aequalium prohibitus, L.: sibi cum deā congressūs nocturnos esse, L.—A joining battle, onset, encounter, fight: ante congressum: cum his navibus classi congressus erat, Cs.: magnam cladem in congressu facere, S.: Tris uno congressu (ferit), V.: alcuius durior, Ta.* * *meeting, interview; assembly/conference; encounter; engagement, clash; contest; union, combination, coming together; sexual/social intercourse; companionship -
15 coniūrātiō
coniūrātiō ōnis, f [coniuro], a uniting in an oath, sworn union, alliance: nobilitatis, Cs.: de bello, L.: (mulierum), common understanding, T. —A conspiracy, plot, secret combination: Catilinae, S.: impia, L.: coniurationem patefacere: coniurationis particeps: nefanda in libidinem, L.: deserendae Italiae, L.—A confederacy, band of conspirators: perditorum hominum. -
16 cōnsēnsiō
cōnsēnsiō ōnis, f [consentio], an agreeing together, agreement, unanimity, common accord: numquam maior populi R.: ratio, plena consensionis omnium: omnium omni in re: tanta Galliae consensio fuit libertatis vindicandae, Cs.: naturae, harmony.—A plot, combination, conspiracy: insidiarum: magna multorum, N.: aperta, Ta.: globus consensionis, i. e. of conspirators, N.* * *agreement (opinion), consent, accordance, harmony; unanimity; plot, conspiracy -
17 contextē
contextē adv. [contexo], in close connection.* * *in close combination; in a connected/coherent manner; connected together (L+S) -
18 temperātiō
temperātiō ōnis, f [tempero], a due mingling, fit proportion, proper combination, symmetry, constitution, temperament: corporis, animi: aeris, temper: civitatis, organization: ordinum, L.: iuris. — A regulating power, organizing principle: sol mens mundi et temperatio.* * * -
19 adjunctio
union, association; admixture, combination; (limiting) addition, qualification -
20 axitiosus
Iaxitiosa, axitiosum ADJIIaxitiosa, axitiosum ADJacting together, in combination; of a party; ?
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