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1 regard
regard [ʀ(ə)gaʀ]masculine nouna. ( = yeux) eyes• il restait assis, le regard perdu (dans le vide) he was sitting there, staring into space• son regard était dur/tendre he had a hard/tender look in his eye• il avançait, le regard fixe he was walking along with a fixed stareb. ( = coup d'œil) lookc. ( = point de vue) porter or jeter un regard critique sur qch to take a critical look at sthd. [d'égout] manholee. (locutions)* * *ʀ(ə)gaʀ
1.
nom masculin1) ( action de regarder) lookinterroger quelqu'un du regard — to look enquiringly GB ou inquiringly US at somebody
suivre quelque chose/quelqu'un du regard — to follow something/somebody with one's eyes
jeter un regard rapide à or sur quelque chose — to glance at something
loin or à l'abri des regards indiscrets — far from prying eyes
2) ( yeux) eyes (pl)un regard clair — light-coloured [BrE] eyes
3) ( expression) expressionson regard triste — his/her sad expression
4) ( manière de juger) eye
2.
au regard de locution prépositive fml with regard to
3.
en regard de locution prépositive fml compared with
4.
en regard locution adverbiale* * *ʀ(ə)ɡaʀ nm1) (action de regarder, yeux) look, (= coup d'œil) glanceIl lui a jeté un regard méfiant. — He gave him a wary look., He looked at him warily.
Tous les regards se sont tournés vers lui. — All eyes turned towards him.
2) (= expression) look in one's eyeOn voyait à son regard qu'elle était contrariée. — You could tell from the look in her eyes that she was upset.
3) (= ouverture) inspection hole, [égout] manhole* * *A nm1 ( action de regarder) look; porter son regard sur qch to look at sth; diriger son regard vers qch to look toward(s) sth; détourner le regard to look away; chercher qch/qn du regard to look around for sth/sb; interroger qn du regard to look enquiringly GB ou inquiringly US at sb; suivre qch/qn du regard to follow sth/sb with one's eyes; ‘suivez mon regard’ ‘follow my eyes’; avertir qn du regard to give sb a warning look; elle attire tous les regards everyone looks at her; jeter un regard rapide à or sur qch to have a quick look at sth, to glance at sth; ( en feuilletant) to glance through sth; regard en coin sidelong glance; regard fixe stare; avoir le regard fixe to have a fixed stare; avoir le regard perdu to have a blank ou vacant look; j'ai croisé son regard our eyes met; échanger des regards to exchange looks; soutenir le regard de qn to look sb straight in the eyes without flinching; loin or à l'abri des regards indiscrets far from prying eyes; soustraire qch aux regards to conceal sth from view; elle ne m'a pas accordé un seul regard she didn't even look at me;2 ( yeux) eyes; un regard clair light-colouredGB eyes;3 ( expression) expression; son regard triste her sad expression; un regard timide a shy expression; un regard de colère an angry expression; elle a un regard intelligent she looks intelligent; d'un regard admiratif/inquiet admiringly/anxiously; sous le regard amusé/anxieux/envieux de qn under the amused/anxious/jealous eye of sb; jeter un regard noir à qn to give sb a black look; regard méchant glare; lancer or jeter un regard méchant à qn to glare at sb; son regard se durcissait his/her eyes hardened; on lisait la tristesse/joie dans son regard you could tell by his/her expression that he/she was sad/happy;4 ( manière de juger) eye; le regard de l'anthropologue the anthropologist's eye; le regard des autres other people's opinion; c'est un autre regard sur la situation it's another way of looking at the situation; porter un regard critique sur qch to look critically at sth; porter un regard nouveau sur qch to take a fresh look at sth;5 ( fait de fixer son attention sur) look; un bref regard sur l'actualité a quick look at the news;B au regard de fml loc prép with regard to; au regard du chômage/du règlement with regard to unemployment/to the rules; au regard de la loi/du parti in the eyes of the law/of the party.D en regard loc adv avec une carte en regard with a map on the opposite page; texte original avec la traduction en regard parallel text.[rəgar] nom masculinson regard était haineux he had a look of hatred in his eye ou eyes, his eyes were full of hatredil a détourné le regard he averted his gaze, he looked awaylancer un regard à quelqu'un to look at somebody, to glance at somebodyil lançait aux visiteurs des regards mauvais he glared at the visitors ou gave the visitors nasty looksporter un regard nouveau sur quelqu'un/quelque chose (figuré) to look at somebody/something in a new lightcouver quelque chose/quelqu'un du regard to stare at something/somebody with greedy eyes3. [d'égout] manhole[de four] peepholeau regard de locution prépositionnelle1. [aux termes de] in the eyes ofen regard locution adverbialeen regard de locution prépositionnelle1. [face à]en regard de la colonne des chiffres facing ou opposite the column of figures2. [en comparaison avec] compared with -
2 timide
timide [timid]adjectivea. ( = embarrassé) [personne, air, sourire, voix] shy, timidb. ( = hésitant) [personne, critique, réponse, réforme] timid ; [politique, reprise économique] tentative* * *timid
1.
adjectif [personne, animal] shy, timid; [critique, réforme] timid; [succès, résultat] limited
2.
nom masculin et féminin shy person* * *timid adj1) (= embarrassé) shy2) (= timoré) timid, timorous* * *A adj [personne, animal] shy, timid; [critique, réforme] timid; [succès, résultat] limited; d'un air timide shyly, timidly; faussement timide coy.B nmf shy person; c'est un grand timide he's terribly shy; il joue les timides he's pretending to be shy, he's being coy.[timid] adjectifil est timide avec les femmes he's shy of ou he shrinks away from womenl'auteur de quelques timides réformes the author of a handful of half-hearted ou feeble reforms————————[timid] nom masculin et féminin -
3 farouche
farouche [faʀu∫]adjectivea. ( = timide) shy* * *faʀuʃ1) [enfant, animal] timid, shy; [adulte] unsociable2) [regard] fierce; [guerrier] savage3) [ennemi, haine] bitter; [adversaire, résolution] fierce; [partisan] staunch; [ambition] driving; [volonté] iron4) liter [paysage, côte] wild* * *faʀuʃ adj1) (enfant) shy2) (animal, bête) wild3) (guerrier) fierce* * *farouche adj1 ( timide) [enfant, animal] timid, shy; ( insociable) [personne] unsociable; elle est peu farouche iron she's anything but shy;3 ( acharné) [ennemi, haine] bitter; [adversaire, résolution, opposition] fierce; [partisan, loyaliste] staunch; [ambition] driving; [volonté] iron ( épith);[faruʃ] adjectif[volonté] fierce2. [animal] wild -
4 ce
ce [sə]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. <━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► L'anglais distingue plus nettement que le français les objets ou personnes qui sont proches de ceux qui sont moins proches (dans l'espace ou dans le temps, ou subjectivement). Pour les objets et personnes qui sont proches, on choisira this, pour les moins proches, on préférera that.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• j'aime beaucoup ces boucles d'oreille (que je porte) I really like these earrings ; (que tu portes) I really like those earrings• ce Paul Durat est un drôle de personnage ! that Paul Durat is quite a character!• cette idée ! what an idea!• le 8 de ce mois ( = ce mois-là) the 8th of that month2. <━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► ce becomes c' before en and forms of the verb être that begin with a vowel.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• ce qui est important, c'est... what really matters is...• nous n'avons pas de jardin, ce qui est dommage we haven't got a garden, which is a pity► ce que what ; (reprenant une proposition) which• ce qu'elle m'a dit, c'est qu'elle n'a pas le temps what she told me was that she hasn't got time• il pleut beaucoup, ce que j'aime bien it rains a lot, which I like• ce que les gens sont bêtes ! people are so stupid!• ce qu'elle joue bien ! she's such a good player!• ce qu'il m'agace ! he's so annoying!━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► ce dont━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► Notez la place de la préposition en anglais.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━* * *seə* * *seə1. nf2) COMMERCESee:2. nm1) INDUSTRIESee:2) ÉDUCATIONSee:* * *A adj dém1 ○( avec un sujet redondant) alors, ce bébé, ça pousse? how's the baby doing?; et ces travaux, ça avance? how's the work progressing?; cet entretien, ça s'est bien passé? how did the interview go?; et cette grippe? how's your flu?;2 ( de politesse) et pour ces dames? what are the ladies having?; si ces messieurs veulent bien me suivre if the gentlemen would care to follow me;3 ( suivi d'une précision) il a commis cette erreur que commettent beaucoup de gens he made the mistake so many people make; il n'est pas de ces hommes qui manquent de parole he's not the kind of man ou the sort to break his word; je lui rends cette justice qu'il m'a tenu au courant I must say in all fairness to him that he kept me informed; elle a eu cette chance que la corde a tenu she was lucky in that the rope held;4 ( marquant le degré) cette arrogance! what arrogance!; cette idée! what an idea!; ah, ce repas! what a meal!; quand on a ce talent when you are as talented as that; j'ai un de ces rhumes! I've got an awful cold, I've got such a cold!; je ne pensais pas qu'il aurait cette chance/audace I never thought he would be so lucky/cheeky; tu as de ces idées! you've got some funny ideas!B pron dém ce disant so saying; ce faisant in so doing; ce que voyant (and) seeing this; pour ce faire, je devrais déménager in order to do that, I would have to move; il a refusé, et ce, parce que… he refused, and all because…; tout s'est bien passé, et ce, grâce à vos efforts everything went well, and that was all thanks to you; c'est un peu trop, ce me semble it's a bit much, it seems to me; vous êtes, ce dit-on/ce m'a-t-on dit you are, so they say/so I have been told; sur ce, je vous quitte with that, I must take my leave; c'est te dire s'il faisait chaud! which just goes to show how hot it was; c'est tout dire that says it all; fais ce que tu veux do what you like; ne te fie pas à ce qu'il dit don't rely on what he says; dis-moi ce qui s'est passé tell me what happened; voilà ce dont tu as besoin that's what you need; ce que je veux savoir, c'est qui l'a cassé what I want to know is who broke it; c'est ce à quoi il a fait allusion that's what he was alluding to; il faut être riche, ce que je ne suis pas you need to be rich, which I am not; il a fait faillite, ce qui n'est pas surprenant he's gone bankrupt, which is hardly surprising; il a accepté, ce à quoi je ne m'attendais pas he accepted, which is something I didn't expect; ce qui m'étonne, c'est qu'il ait accepté what surprises me is that he accepted; je ne m'attendais pas à ce qu'il écrive I wasn't expecting him to write; il n'y a pas de mal à ce que tu fasses cela there's no harm in your doing that; il s'étonne de ce que tu ne le saches pas he's surprised (that) you don't know; il tient à ce que vous veniez he's very keen that you should come ou for you to come; il se plaint de ce que tu ne l'aies pas consulté he complains (that) you didn't consult him; ce que c'est grand/laid! it's so big/ugly!; c'est étonnant ce qu'il te ressemble! it's amazing how much he looks like you!; ce qu'il a mangé de or comme bonbons! what a lot of sweets GB ou candy US he ate!; ce que c'est que d'être vieux/d'avoir étudié! what it is to be old/to be educated!; ce que c'est que les enfants! that's children for you!; voilà ce que c'est de se vanter/ne pas écouter! that's what comes of boasting/not listening!; ce qu'il ne faut pas accepter/faire! the things one has to put up with/to do!; ce que or qu'est-ce que○ j'ai faim! I'm so hungry!, I'm starving!; ce qu'il○ pleut/fait froid! it's pouring down/freezing!I[sə] (devant 'e' c' [s], devant 'a' ç' [s]) pronom démonstratif1. [sujet du verbe 'être']dire oui, c'est renoncer à sa liberté saying yes means ou amounts to giving up one's freedomc'est encore loin, la mer? is the sea still far away?, is it still a long way to the sea?c'est à toi? is this ou is it yours?serait-ce que tu as oublié? have you forgotten, by any chance?2. [pour insister]c'est l'auteur que je préfère he's/she's my favourite writerc'est à vous, monsieur, que je voudrais parler it was you I wanted to speak to, sirc'est à lui/à toi de décider it's up to him/up to you to decide3. ['c'est que' introduisant une explication]s'il ne parle pas beaucoup, c'est qu'il est timide if he doesn't say much, it's because he's shy4. [comme antécédent du pronom relatif]ce qui, ce que whatce qui m'étonne, c'est que... what surprises me is that...[reprenant la proposition] whichil dit en avoir les moyens, ce que je crois volontiers he says he can afford it, which I'm quite prepared to believe[introduisant une complétive]de ce que: je m'étonne de ce qu'il n'ait rien dit I'm surprised (by the fact that) he didn't say anythingsur ce que: il insiste sur ce que le travail doit être fait en temps voulu he insists that the work must be done in the specified time5. [emploi exclamatif]ce que tu es naïf! you're so naive!, how naive you are!tu vois ce que c'est que de mentir! you see what happens when you lie!, you see where lying gets you!ce que c'est (que) d'être instruit, tout de même! it must be wonderful to be educated!6. (locution)ce disant so saying, with these wordset ce: il n'a rien dit, et ce malgré toutes les menaces he said nothing, (and this) in spite of all the threatssur ce, je vous salue and now, I take my leavesur ce, elle se leva with that, she got upII[sə] (devant nom masculin commençant par voyelle ou h muet cet [sɛt]) ( féminin cette [sɛt], pluriel ces [sɛ]) déterminant (adjectif démonstratif)cette semaine je n'ai rien fait I haven't done a thing this ou this past ou this last week3. [désignant - ce dont on a parlé] this, these pluriel, that, those pluriel ; [ - ce dont on va parler] this, these pluriel4. [suivi d'une proposition relative]voici ce pont dont je t'ai parlé here's the ou that bridge I told you aboutil était de ces comédiens qui... he was one of those actors who...5. [emploi expressif]cet enfant est un modèle de sagesse! this ou that child is so well behaved!et pour ces messieurs, ce sera? now what will the ou you gentlemen have? -
5 craintif
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6 aecus
aequus ( aecus, Pac. 32 Rib.; Lucr. 5, 1023 Lachm. and Munro; AIQVOS, S. C. de Bacch. 1. 26), a, um, adj. [formerly referred to EIKÔ, eoika, but Pott connects it with Sanscr. ēka = one, as if properly, one and uniform; others consider it as akin to aemulor, q. v.].I.A.. Of place, that extends or lies in a horizontal direction, plain, even, level, flat (esp. freq. in the strategic descriptions of the histt.;B. 1.syn.: planus, aequalis, aequabilis, par, similis, justus): locus ad libellam aequus,
level, Varr. R. R. 1, 6 fin.:aequus et planus locus,
Cic. Caec. 17 fin.:in aequum locum se demittere,
Caes. B. G. 7, 28: legio, quae paulo aequiore loco constiterat, id. ib. 7, 51:in aequum locum deducere,
Sall. J. 42 (cf. in Gr. eis to isoW katabainein, Xen. Anab. 4, 6, 18).— Trop.:sive loquitur ex inferiore loco sive aequo sive ex superiore,
i. e. before the judges, sitting on raised seats, or in the Senate, or in the assembly of the people from the rostra, Cic. de Or. 3, 6, 23:meos multos et ex superiore et ex aequo loco sermones habitos cum tuā summā laude,
from the tribune, and on private matters, id. Fam. 3, 8.—In the histt., sometimes subst.: aequum, i, n., with a gen., level ground, a plain:facilem in aequo campi victoriam fore,
Liv. 5, 38:ut primum agmen aequo, ceteri per acclive jugum insurgerent,
Tac. Agr. 35:in aequum digredi,
id. ib. 18:in aequo obstare,
id. ib. 36; id. H. 4, 23.—Also, an eminence, if it rises without inequalities:dum Romanae cohortes in aequum eniterentur,
up the slope, Tac. A. 2, 80.—As a level place is more favorable for military operations than an uneven one, aequus has the signif.,Of place:2.locum se aequum ad dimicandum dedisse,
Caes. B. C. 3, 73:etsi non aequum locum videbat suis,
Nep. Milt. 5, 4:non hic silvas nec paludes, sed aequis locis aequos deos,
Tac. A. 1, 68. —Of time: judicium aequiore tempore fieri oportere, more propitious, Cic. Corn. Fragm. ap. Ascon. p. 72:3.et tempore et loco aequo,
Liv. 26, 3:tempore aequo,
Suet. Caes. 35.—In gen., of persons or things (freq. and class.), favorable, kind, friendly, benevolent, etc.; constr. absol. with dat., or in and acc. (in poets in with abl.).(α).Absol.:(β).consequeris, ut eos ipsos, quos contra statuas, aequos placatosque dimittas,
Cic. Or. 10, 34:nobilitate inimica, non aequo senatu,
id. Q. Fr. 2, 3 med.:meis aequissimis utuntur auribus,
id. Fam. 7, 33:oculis aspicere aequis,
Verg. A. 4, 372:O dominum aequum et bonum,
Suet. Aug. 53:boni et aequi et faciles domini,
id. Tib. 29.—With dat.:(γ).aequa Venus Teucris, Pallas iniqua fuit,
Ov. Tr. 1, 2, 6; id. A. A. 2, 310.—With in and acc.:(δ).quis hoc statuit, quod aequum sit in Quintium, id iniquum esse in Maevium,
Cic. Quint. 14.—With in and abl.:4.victor erat quamvis, aequus in hoste fuit,
Prop. 4, 18, 28.—Hence,aequus, i, m. subst., a friend:II.ego ut me tibi amicissimum esse et aequi et iniqui intellegant, curabo,
both friends and enemies, Cic. Fam. 3, 6 fin.:aequis iniquisque persuasum erat,
Liv. 5, 45.That is equal to another in any quality, equal, like; and of things divided into two equal parts, a half:1.aequo censu censeri,
Plaut. Trin. 2, 4, 92:partīs,
Lucr. 3, 125; so Aur. Vict. Orig. 19, 1; and Vulg. 1 Reg. 30, 24:aequa erit mensura sagorum,
ib. Exod. 26, 8:pondera,
ib. Lev. 19, 36:portio,
ib. 2 Mach. 8, 30:aequa dementia,
Lucr. 1, 705 al.:aequā manu discedere,
to come off with equal advantage, Sall. C. 39; so,aequo Marte pugnare,
with equal success, Liv. 2, 6; Curt. 4, 15, 29; Flor. 4, 2, 48 al.:urbs erat in summo nubibus aequa jugo,
Ov. P. 4, 7, 24:aequum vulnus utrique tulit,
id. M. 9, 719 (cf. id. ib. 7, 803:aequales urebant pectora flammae): sequiturque patrem non passibus aequis,
Verg. A. 2, 724:pars aequa mundi,
Plin. 2, 19, 17, § 81:utinam esset mihi pars aequa amoris tecum, i. e. aeque vicissim amaremus,
Ter. Eun. 1, 2, 12:non tertiam portionem, verum aequam,
Plin. 3, 1, 1, § 5 al. —Hence the adverbial phrases,Ex aequo, in like manner, in an equal degree, equally ( = ex isou, Hdt., Dem.), Lucr. 1, 854:2.dixit et ex aequo donis formaque probata, etc.,
Ov. H. 16, 87; 20, 123; id. Am. 1, 10, 33; id. A. A. 2, 682; id. M. 3, 145; 4, 62; Liv. 36, 37:adversarum rerum ex aequo socii sunt (Fosi Cheruscis), cum in secundis minores fuissent,
Tac. G. 36 fin. —In aequo esse or stare, to be equal:B.qui cogit mori nolentem, in aequo est, quique properantem impedit,
Sen. Phoen. 98:ut naturam oderint, quod infra deos sumus, quod non in aequo illis stetimus,
id. Ben. 2, 29: in aequo ponere aliquem alicui, to make equal, to put on an equality, to compare:in aequo eum (Philopoemenem) summis imperatoribus posuerunt,
Liv. 39, 50 fin. —Morally.1.Of persons, fair, equitable, impartial in conduct toward others (diff. from justus, just; v. aequitas, II.); constr. absol., with dat.; more rarely with gen.:2.praetor aequus et sapiens,
Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 65; 2, 5, 59:aequissimus aestimator et judex,
id. Fin. 3, 2:praebere se aequum alicui,
id. Fam. 2, 1:absentium aequi, praesentibus mobiles,
benevolent toward, Tac. A. 6, 36.—Of things, fair, right, equitable, reasonable: ITA. SENATVS. AIQVOM. CENSVIT., S. C. de Bach. 1. 26: et aecum et rectum est, Pac. ap. Non. 261, 13 (Trag. Rel. p. 81 Rib.):3.aequa et honesta postulatio,
Cic. Rosc. Am. 2:quod justum est et aequum, servis praestate,
just and fair, Vulg. Col. 4, 1:postulo primum id, quod aequissimum est, ut, etc.,
Cic. Clu. 2:aequa lex et omnibus utilis,
id. Balb. 27:aequissimis legibus monere,
Aur. Vict. Caes. 9, 5:aequae conditiones,
Vell. 2, 25; see Fischer, Gr. II. 611.—Hence,ae-quum, i, n. subst., what is fair, equitable, or just; fairness, equity, or justice, etc.: jus atque aequum, Enn. ap. Non. p. 399, 10 (Trag. v. 224 Vahl.):4.utilitas justi prope mater et aequi,
Hor. S. 1, 3, 98:aequi studium,
Aur. Vict. Caes. 24, 6.—Often with comparatives, more than is right, proper, reasonable:lamentari amplius aequo,
Lucr. 3, 966:injurias gravius aequo habere,
to feel too deeply, Sall. C. 50:potus largius aequo,
Hor. Ep. 2, 2, 215.—Hence, aequum est, it is reasonable, proper, right, etc.; constr. with acc. and inf., in good prose also with dat. pers. and ut, Rudd. II. p. 235, n. 21: nos quiescere aequom est, Enn. ap. Diom. p. 382 P. (Trag. v. 199 Vahl.):quae liberum scire aequom est adulescentem,
Ter. Eun. 3, 2, 25:significant Imbecillorum esse aecum misererier omnīs,
Lucr. 5, 1023:non est aequum nos derelinquere verbum Dei,
Vulg. Act. 6, 2:aequius est mori quam auctoritatem imperii foedare,
Aur. Vict. Epit. 12, 7:ut peritis? Ut piscatorem aequomst (sc. perire), fame sitique speque,
Plaut. Rud. 2, 2, 7; so,sicut aequum est homini de potestate deorum timide et pauca dicamus,
Cic. Imp. Pomp. 16, 47.—In Plaut., with abl.:plus vidissem quam med atque illo aequom foret,
would be becoming in me and him, Plaut. Bacch. 3, 3, 84; id. Rud. prol. 47.—Aequum as subst. very freq. with bonum = aequitas, equitable conduct toward others, fairness, equity, etc.:C.neque quidquam queo aequi bonique ab eo impetrare,
what is right and just, Plaut. Curc. 1, 1, 65:cum de jure civili, cum de aequo et bono disputaretur,
Cic. Brut. 38:ex aequo et bono, non ex callido versutoque jure rem judicari oportere,
id. Caecin. 23:fit reus magis ex aequo bonoque quam ex jure gentium,
in accordance with justice and equity, Sall. J. 35.— Also without et:illi dolum malum, illi fidem bonam, illi aequum bonum tradiderunt,
Cic. Top. 17.—So also, aequius melius, according to greater equily, Cic. Off. 3, 15; id. Top. 17.—Of a state of mind, even, unruffled, calm, composed, tranquil, patient, enduring (cf. aequitas, II. B.);1.esp. freq. with animus or mens: animus aequos optumum est aerumnae condimentum,
Plaut. Rud. 2, 3, 71:concedo et quod animus aequus est et quia necesse est,
Cic. Rosc. Am. 50:quodadest memento Componere aequus,
Hor. C. 3, 29, 32:tentantem majora, fere praesentibus aequum,
id. Ep. 1, 17, 24;and so, aequam memento rebus in arduis Servare mentem, etc.,
id. C. 2, 3, 1.—Esp. freq. in the adv. abl.: aequo (aequiore, aequissimo) animo, with even mind, with equanimity, patiently, calmly, quietly, with forbearance: ego, nisi Bibulus adniteretur de triumpho, aequo animo essem, nunc vero aischron siôpan, Cic. Att. 6, 8:carere aequo animo aliquā re,
id. Brut. 6:ferre aliquid,
Nep. Dion. 6, 7; Aur. Vict. Orig. 6, 3:accipere,
Sall. C. 3, 2:tolerare,
id. J. 31:quo aequiore animo Germanicus celerem successionem operiretur,
Suet. Tib. 25:testem se in judiciis interrogari aequissimo animo patiebatur,
id. Aug. 56.—In eccl. Lat. = bono animo:aequo animo esto,
be of good cheer, Vulg. 3 Reg. 21, 7:aequo animo (aliquis) est? Psallat,
ib. Jacob. 5, 13.—Hence: aequi bonique facere aliquid, to regard as fair and reasonable (prop., a gen. of value, Roby, § 1191), to put up with, be content with, submit to, acquiesce in, etc.:istuc aequi bonique facio,
Ter. Heaut. 4, 5, 40: tranquillissimus animus meus totum istuc aequi boni [p. 59] facit, Cic. Att. 7, 7; Liv. 34, 22 fin.:aequi istuc faciam,
it will be all the same to me, Plaut. Mil. 3, 1, 189.—So also:aequi bonique dicere,
to propose any thing reasonable, Ter. Phorm. 4, 3, 32.—Hence, aequē, adv., in like manner, equally, just as = ex aequo, pariter, Gr. isôs, omoiôs (indicating the entire equality of two objects compared, while similiter denotes only likeness):eā (benevolentiā) non pariter omnes egemus... honore et gloriā fortasse non aeque omnes egent,
Cic. Off. 2, 8, 30:non possum ego non aut proxime atque ille aut etiam aeque laborare,
id. Fam. 9, 13, 2:universa aeque eveniunt justo et impio,
Vulg. Eccl. 9, 2.In the comic poets with cum or the comp. abl. (cf. adaeque); in Cic. and good class. authors gen. with et, atque, ac, ac si; less class. with quam, ut, quam ut; in Petr. with tamquam.(α).Aeque—cum:(β).animum advorte, ut aeque mecum haec scias,
Plaut. As. 2, 2, 66, id. Poen. prol. 47: novi aeque omnia tecum, Ter Phorm. 5, 9, 43. But in Plaut. As. 4, 1, 26, tecum una postea aeque pocla potitet, una belongs with tecum to potitet, and aeque is put absol. (sc. ut tu).—Aeque with comp. abl.:(γ).nullus est hoc meticulosus aeque,
as this person, Plaut. Am. 1, 1, 137:qui me in terrā aeque fortunatus erit,
id. Curc. 1, 2, 51.—Aeque—et or aeque— que (as in Gr. ison kai, isa kai, Soph. Oed. Tyr. 611;(δ).Thuc. 3, 14). nisi aeque amicos et nosmet ipsos diligamus,
equally as ourselves, Cic. Fin. 1, 20, 67. versūs aeque prima et media et extrema pars attenditur, id. de Or. 3, 50, 192; id. Rosc. Com. 1, 2; so id. Mur. 13, 28; id. Clu. 69, 195, id. Tusc. 2, 26, 62 al.:quod Aeque neglectum pueris senibusque nocebit,
Hor. Ep. 1, 1, 26.—Aeque—atque, —ac, —ac si, as... as; as much as, as: vide ne, quem tu esse hebetem deputes aeque ac pecus, is, etc., Att. ap. Cic. Div. 1, 22, 45: pumex non aeque aridus atque hic est senex, Plaut Aul. 2, 4, 18; Ter. Phorm 1, 2, 43; Varr. R. R. 3, 8, 2:(ε).nisi haberes, qui illis aeque ac tu ipse gauderet,
Cic. Lael. 6, 22:sed me colit et observat aeque atque patronum suum,
id. Fam. 13, 69; 2, 2; so id. Brut. 71, 248; id. Rosc. Am. 40, 116; Cels. 6, 15; Tac. H. 4, 5; Suet. Caes. 12 al.: aeque ac si. with the subj., just as if. altogether as if:Egnatii absentis rem ut tueare, aeque a te peto ac si mea negotia essent,
Cic. Fam. 13, 43, 3; Auct Her 2, 13, 19: quo factum est, ut jumenta aeque nitida ex castellis educeret ac si in campestribus ea locis habuisset, Nep Eum. 5. 6; Liv. 10, 7, 4; 44, 22, 5 al.—Aeque— quam (only in Plaut. and prose writers from the Aug. per.;(ζ).neither in Cic. nor in Cæs.),
as... as, in the same manner as, as well... as, like, Plaut. Mil. 2, 5, 55;nullum esse agrum aeque feracem quam hic est,
id. Epid. 2, 3, 1:nihil aeque eos terruit quam robur et color imperatoris,
Liv. 28, 26, 14, 5, 6, 11; so 5, 3, 4; 31, 1, 3;in navibus posita aeque quam in aedificiis,
Plin. 2, 81, 83, § 196; so 2, 70, 72, § 180; Tac. A. 14, 38; id. H. 2, 10; 4, 52; Suet. Aug. 64, 89; id. Galb. 4 al.—Aeque—ut, a rare combination, and unworthy of imitation (in authors of the class. per. its reception rests, for the most part, upon false readings for aeque et or aeque ac), as much as, like, cui nihil aeque in causis agendis ut brevitas placet, Plin. Ep. 1, 20, 1 Keil. accinctus aeque ut discinctus, Vulg. 3 Reg. 20, 11. Possidebitis eam (terram) singuli aeque ut frater suus, ib. Ezech. 47, 14:(η).idemque proficeret aeque ut rosaceum,
Plin. 23, 4, 45, § 89, where Jan reads proficeret quod rosaceum. —In Plaut. once aeque—quasi for the class. aeque ac. quem videam aeque esse maestum quasi dies si dicta sit, Plaut. As. 5, 1, 11 Fleck.—Sometimes aeque—aeque, as well as, as much as. aeque pauperibus prodest, locupletibus aeque, Hor. Ep. 1, 1, 25:2.aeque discordiam praepositorum, aeque concordiam subjectis exitiosam,
Tac. Agr. 15.—The comparison is often to be supplied from the whole sentence or context; hence, aeque stands absol. for aeque ac, etc. (ante-class. freq.; also in Cic. and Liv.), equally, as much as, as: eadem oratio non aeque valet, Enn. ap. Gell. 11, 4 (from Eurip. Hec. 295: logos... ou tauton sthenei):3.satin habes, si feminarum nullast quam aeque diligam?
Plaut. Am. 1, 3, 11: Aetna mons non aeque altus, id. Mil. 4, 2, 73; 4, 7, 10; id. Most. 1, 3, 85, etc.; Ter. Phorm. 3, 3, 32; Cic. Fam. 4, 6, 1; so id. ib. 5, 21; id. Fin. 4, 33, 62:aeque sons,
Liv. 29, 19, 2;so 29, 19, 4 al.: aeque non est dubium,
it is as little doubtful, Plin. 2, 15, 13, § 68.—With omnes, uterque, and definite numerals, to indicate that a thing applies equally to all the objects designated, equally:4.non omnia eadem aeque omnibus suavia esse scito,
Plaut. As. 3, 3, 51; Ter. Hec. 2, 1, 2; so Cic. Off. 2, 8, 31; id. Fin. 4, 27, 75 al.:etsi utrique nostrum prope aeque gratae erant (litterae),
id. Fam. 13, 18; so id. Quint. 28, 86; Verg. G. 3, 118; Ov. Tr. 3, 8, 33; id. Fast. 1, 226:aeque ambo pares,
Plaut. Men. 5, 9, 60:duae trabes aeque longae,
Caes. B. C. 2, 10; Suet. Aug. 101. —Sometimes absol., with several substantives, alike, equally:5.Tragici et comici Numquam aeque sunt meditati,
Plaut. Pers. 4, 2, 4. imperium bonus ignavus aeque sibi exoptant, Sall. C. 11.—In Plaut. Capt. 3, 5, 42, nec est mihi quisquam, melius aeque cui velim, melius velle is, perhaps, to be taken together as a phrase, and the comp. considered as used in a restricted sense, as in melius est. Others consider the comp. as used for the simple positive; cf. adaeque.—B.Justly, with equity:► An old adverb.mihi id aeque factum arbitror,
Plaut. Mil. 5, 22 dub. (Ritschl: jureque id factum arbitror).— Comp.: ferro quam fame aequius perituros, more willingly, Sall. H. Fragm.— Sup.:aequissime jus dicere,
Aur. Vict. Epit. 11, 2:judicas ut qui aequissime,
Sid. 15, Ep. 11.form, aequĭter, also occurs: praeda per participes aequiter partita est, Liv. Andr. ap. Non. 512, 31; so Pac. ib., Att. ib., and Plaut. acc. to Prisc. 1010 P. -
7 aequum
aequus ( aecus, Pac. 32 Rib.; Lucr. 5, 1023 Lachm. and Munro; AIQVOS, S. C. de Bacch. 1. 26), a, um, adj. [formerly referred to EIKÔ, eoika, but Pott connects it with Sanscr. ēka = one, as if properly, one and uniform; others consider it as akin to aemulor, q. v.].I.A.. Of place, that extends or lies in a horizontal direction, plain, even, level, flat (esp. freq. in the strategic descriptions of the histt.;B. 1.syn.: planus, aequalis, aequabilis, par, similis, justus): locus ad libellam aequus,
level, Varr. R. R. 1, 6 fin.:aequus et planus locus,
Cic. Caec. 17 fin.:in aequum locum se demittere,
Caes. B. G. 7, 28: legio, quae paulo aequiore loco constiterat, id. ib. 7, 51:in aequum locum deducere,
Sall. J. 42 (cf. in Gr. eis to isoW katabainein, Xen. Anab. 4, 6, 18).— Trop.:sive loquitur ex inferiore loco sive aequo sive ex superiore,
i. e. before the judges, sitting on raised seats, or in the Senate, or in the assembly of the people from the rostra, Cic. de Or. 3, 6, 23:meos multos et ex superiore et ex aequo loco sermones habitos cum tuā summā laude,
from the tribune, and on private matters, id. Fam. 3, 8.—In the histt., sometimes subst.: aequum, i, n., with a gen., level ground, a plain:facilem in aequo campi victoriam fore,
Liv. 5, 38:ut primum agmen aequo, ceteri per acclive jugum insurgerent,
Tac. Agr. 35:in aequum digredi,
id. ib. 18:in aequo obstare,
id. ib. 36; id. H. 4, 23.—Also, an eminence, if it rises without inequalities:dum Romanae cohortes in aequum eniterentur,
up the slope, Tac. A. 2, 80.—As a level place is more favorable for military operations than an uneven one, aequus has the signif.,Of place:2.locum se aequum ad dimicandum dedisse,
Caes. B. C. 3, 73:etsi non aequum locum videbat suis,
Nep. Milt. 5, 4:non hic silvas nec paludes, sed aequis locis aequos deos,
Tac. A. 1, 68. —Of time: judicium aequiore tempore fieri oportere, more propitious, Cic. Corn. Fragm. ap. Ascon. p. 72:3.et tempore et loco aequo,
Liv. 26, 3:tempore aequo,
Suet. Caes. 35.—In gen., of persons or things (freq. and class.), favorable, kind, friendly, benevolent, etc.; constr. absol. with dat., or in and acc. (in poets in with abl.).(α).Absol.:(β).consequeris, ut eos ipsos, quos contra statuas, aequos placatosque dimittas,
Cic. Or. 10, 34:nobilitate inimica, non aequo senatu,
id. Q. Fr. 2, 3 med.:meis aequissimis utuntur auribus,
id. Fam. 7, 33:oculis aspicere aequis,
Verg. A. 4, 372:O dominum aequum et bonum,
Suet. Aug. 53:boni et aequi et faciles domini,
id. Tib. 29.—With dat.:(γ).aequa Venus Teucris, Pallas iniqua fuit,
Ov. Tr. 1, 2, 6; id. A. A. 2, 310.—With in and acc.:(δ).quis hoc statuit, quod aequum sit in Quintium, id iniquum esse in Maevium,
Cic. Quint. 14.—With in and abl.:4.victor erat quamvis, aequus in hoste fuit,
Prop. 4, 18, 28.—Hence,aequus, i, m. subst., a friend:II.ego ut me tibi amicissimum esse et aequi et iniqui intellegant, curabo,
both friends and enemies, Cic. Fam. 3, 6 fin.:aequis iniquisque persuasum erat,
Liv. 5, 45.That is equal to another in any quality, equal, like; and of things divided into two equal parts, a half:1.aequo censu censeri,
Plaut. Trin. 2, 4, 92:partīs,
Lucr. 3, 125; so Aur. Vict. Orig. 19, 1; and Vulg. 1 Reg. 30, 24:aequa erit mensura sagorum,
ib. Exod. 26, 8:pondera,
ib. Lev. 19, 36:portio,
ib. 2 Mach. 8, 30:aequa dementia,
Lucr. 1, 705 al.:aequā manu discedere,
to come off with equal advantage, Sall. C. 39; so,aequo Marte pugnare,
with equal success, Liv. 2, 6; Curt. 4, 15, 29; Flor. 4, 2, 48 al.:urbs erat in summo nubibus aequa jugo,
Ov. P. 4, 7, 24:aequum vulnus utrique tulit,
id. M. 9, 719 (cf. id. ib. 7, 803:aequales urebant pectora flammae): sequiturque patrem non passibus aequis,
Verg. A. 2, 724:pars aequa mundi,
Plin. 2, 19, 17, § 81:utinam esset mihi pars aequa amoris tecum, i. e. aeque vicissim amaremus,
Ter. Eun. 1, 2, 12:non tertiam portionem, verum aequam,
Plin. 3, 1, 1, § 5 al. —Hence the adverbial phrases,Ex aequo, in like manner, in an equal degree, equally ( = ex isou, Hdt., Dem.), Lucr. 1, 854:2.dixit et ex aequo donis formaque probata, etc.,
Ov. H. 16, 87; 20, 123; id. Am. 1, 10, 33; id. A. A. 2, 682; id. M. 3, 145; 4, 62; Liv. 36, 37:adversarum rerum ex aequo socii sunt (Fosi Cheruscis), cum in secundis minores fuissent,
Tac. G. 36 fin. —In aequo esse or stare, to be equal:B.qui cogit mori nolentem, in aequo est, quique properantem impedit,
Sen. Phoen. 98:ut naturam oderint, quod infra deos sumus, quod non in aequo illis stetimus,
id. Ben. 2, 29: in aequo ponere aliquem alicui, to make equal, to put on an equality, to compare:in aequo eum (Philopoemenem) summis imperatoribus posuerunt,
Liv. 39, 50 fin. —Morally.1.Of persons, fair, equitable, impartial in conduct toward others (diff. from justus, just; v. aequitas, II.); constr. absol., with dat.; more rarely with gen.:2.praetor aequus et sapiens,
Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 65; 2, 5, 59:aequissimus aestimator et judex,
id. Fin. 3, 2:praebere se aequum alicui,
id. Fam. 2, 1:absentium aequi, praesentibus mobiles,
benevolent toward, Tac. A. 6, 36.—Of things, fair, right, equitable, reasonable: ITA. SENATVS. AIQVOM. CENSVIT., S. C. de Bach. 1. 26: et aecum et rectum est, Pac. ap. Non. 261, 13 (Trag. Rel. p. 81 Rib.):3.aequa et honesta postulatio,
Cic. Rosc. Am. 2:quod justum est et aequum, servis praestate,
just and fair, Vulg. Col. 4, 1:postulo primum id, quod aequissimum est, ut, etc.,
Cic. Clu. 2:aequa lex et omnibus utilis,
id. Balb. 27:aequissimis legibus monere,
Aur. Vict. Caes. 9, 5:aequae conditiones,
Vell. 2, 25; see Fischer, Gr. II. 611.—Hence,ae-quum, i, n. subst., what is fair, equitable, or just; fairness, equity, or justice, etc.: jus atque aequum, Enn. ap. Non. p. 399, 10 (Trag. v. 224 Vahl.):4.utilitas justi prope mater et aequi,
Hor. S. 1, 3, 98:aequi studium,
Aur. Vict. Caes. 24, 6.—Often with comparatives, more than is right, proper, reasonable:lamentari amplius aequo,
Lucr. 3, 966:injurias gravius aequo habere,
to feel too deeply, Sall. C. 50:potus largius aequo,
Hor. Ep. 2, 2, 215.—Hence, aequum est, it is reasonable, proper, right, etc.; constr. with acc. and inf., in good prose also with dat. pers. and ut, Rudd. II. p. 235, n. 21: nos quiescere aequom est, Enn. ap. Diom. p. 382 P. (Trag. v. 199 Vahl.):quae liberum scire aequom est adulescentem,
Ter. Eun. 3, 2, 25:significant Imbecillorum esse aecum misererier omnīs,
Lucr. 5, 1023:non est aequum nos derelinquere verbum Dei,
Vulg. Act. 6, 2:aequius est mori quam auctoritatem imperii foedare,
Aur. Vict. Epit. 12, 7:ut peritis? Ut piscatorem aequomst (sc. perire), fame sitique speque,
Plaut. Rud. 2, 2, 7; so,sicut aequum est homini de potestate deorum timide et pauca dicamus,
Cic. Imp. Pomp. 16, 47.—In Plaut., with abl.:plus vidissem quam med atque illo aequom foret,
would be becoming in me and him, Plaut. Bacch. 3, 3, 84; id. Rud. prol. 47.—Aequum as subst. very freq. with bonum = aequitas, equitable conduct toward others, fairness, equity, etc.:C.neque quidquam queo aequi bonique ab eo impetrare,
what is right and just, Plaut. Curc. 1, 1, 65:cum de jure civili, cum de aequo et bono disputaretur,
Cic. Brut. 38:ex aequo et bono, non ex callido versutoque jure rem judicari oportere,
id. Caecin. 23:fit reus magis ex aequo bonoque quam ex jure gentium,
in accordance with justice and equity, Sall. J. 35.— Also without et:illi dolum malum, illi fidem bonam, illi aequum bonum tradiderunt,
Cic. Top. 17.—So also, aequius melius, according to greater equily, Cic. Off. 3, 15; id. Top. 17.—Of a state of mind, even, unruffled, calm, composed, tranquil, patient, enduring (cf. aequitas, II. B.);1.esp. freq. with animus or mens: animus aequos optumum est aerumnae condimentum,
Plaut. Rud. 2, 3, 71:concedo et quod animus aequus est et quia necesse est,
Cic. Rosc. Am. 50:quodadest memento Componere aequus,
Hor. C. 3, 29, 32:tentantem majora, fere praesentibus aequum,
id. Ep. 1, 17, 24;and so, aequam memento rebus in arduis Servare mentem, etc.,
id. C. 2, 3, 1.—Esp. freq. in the adv. abl.: aequo (aequiore, aequissimo) animo, with even mind, with equanimity, patiently, calmly, quietly, with forbearance: ego, nisi Bibulus adniteretur de triumpho, aequo animo essem, nunc vero aischron siôpan, Cic. Att. 6, 8:carere aequo animo aliquā re,
id. Brut. 6:ferre aliquid,
Nep. Dion. 6, 7; Aur. Vict. Orig. 6, 3:accipere,
Sall. C. 3, 2:tolerare,
id. J. 31:quo aequiore animo Germanicus celerem successionem operiretur,
Suet. Tib. 25:testem se in judiciis interrogari aequissimo animo patiebatur,
id. Aug. 56.—In eccl. Lat. = bono animo:aequo animo esto,
be of good cheer, Vulg. 3 Reg. 21, 7:aequo animo (aliquis) est? Psallat,
ib. Jacob. 5, 13.—Hence: aequi bonique facere aliquid, to regard as fair and reasonable (prop., a gen. of value, Roby, § 1191), to put up with, be content with, submit to, acquiesce in, etc.:istuc aequi bonique facio,
Ter. Heaut. 4, 5, 40: tranquillissimus animus meus totum istuc aequi boni [p. 59] facit, Cic. Att. 7, 7; Liv. 34, 22 fin.:aequi istuc faciam,
it will be all the same to me, Plaut. Mil. 3, 1, 189.—So also:aequi bonique dicere,
to propose any thing reasonable, Ter. Phorm. 4, 3, 32.—Hence, aequē, adv., in like manner, equally, just as = ex aequo, pariter, Gr. isôs, omoiôs (indicating the entire equality of two objects compared, while similiter denotes only likeness):eā (benevolentiā) non pariter omnes egemus... honore et gloriā fortasse non aeque omnes egent,
Cic. Off. 2, 8, 30:non possum ego non aut proxime atque ille aut etiam aeque laborare,
id. Fam. 9, 13, 2:universa aeque eveniunt justo et impio,
Vulg. Eccl. 9, 2.In the comic poets with cum or the comp. abl. (cf. adaeque); in Cic. and good class. authors gen. with et, atque, ac, ac si; less class. with quam, ut, quam ut; in Petr. with tamquam.(α).Aeque—cum:(β).animum advorte, ut aeque mecum haec scias,
Plaut. As. 2, 2, 66, id. Poen. prol. 47: novi aeque omnia tecum, Ter Phorm. 5, 9, 43. But in Plaut. As. 4, 1, 26, tecum una postea aeque pocla potitet, una belongs with tecum to potitet, and aeque is put absol. (sc. ut tu).—Aeque with comp. abl.:(γ).nullus est hoc meticulosus aeque,
as this person, Plaut. Am. 1, 1, 137:qui me in terrā aeque fortunatus erit,
id. Curc. 1, 2, 51.—Aeque—et or aeque— que (as in Gr. ison kai, isa kai, Soph. Oed. Tyr. 611;(δ).Thuc. 3, 14). nisi aeque amicos et nosmet ipsos diligamus,
equally as ourselves, Cic. Fin. 1, 20, 67. versūs aeque prima et media et extrema pars attenditur, id. de Or. 3, 50, 192; id. Rosc. Com. 1, 2; so id. Mur. 13, 28; id. Clu. 69, 195, id. Tusc. 2, 26, 62 al.:quod Aeque neglectum pueris senibusque nocebit,
Hor. Ep. 1, 1, 26.—Aeque—atque, —ac, —ac si, as... as; as much as, as: vide ne, quem tu esse hebetem deputes aeque ac pecus, is, etc., Att. ap. Cic. Div. 1, 22, 45: pumex non aeque aridus atque hic est senex, Plaut Aul. 2, 4, 18; Ter. Phorm 1, 2, 43; Varr. R. R. 3, 8, 2:(ε).nisi haberes, qui illis aeque ac tu ipse gauderet,
Cic. Lael. 6, 22:sed me colit et observat aeque atque patronum suum,
id. Fam. 13, 69; 2, 2; so id. Brut. 71, 248; id. Rosc. Am. 40, 116; Cels. 6, 15; Tac. H. 4, 5; Suet. Caes. 12 al.: aeque ac si. with the subj., just as if. altogether as if:Egnatii absentis rem ut tueare, aeque a te peto ac si mea negotia essent,
Cic. Fam. 13, 43, 3; Auct Her 2, 13, 19: quo factum est, ut jumenta aeque nitida ex castellis educeret ac si in campestribus ea locis habuisset, Nep Eum. 5. 6; Liv. 10, 7, 4; 44, 22, 5 al.—Aeque— quam (only in Plaut. and prose writers from the Aug. per.;(ζ).neither in Cic. nor in Cæs.),
as... as, in the same manner as, as well... as, like, Plaut. Mil. 2, 5, 55;nullum esse agrum aeque feracem quam hic est,
id. Epid. 2, 3, 1:nihil aeque eos terruit quam robur et color imperatoris,
Liv. 28, 26, 14, 5, 6, 11; so 5, 3, 4; 31, 1, 3;in navibus posita aeque quam in aedificiis,
Plin. 2, 81, 83, § 196; so 2, 70, 72, § 180; Tac. A. 14, 38; id. H. 2, 10; 4, 52; Suet. Aug. 64, 89; id. Galb. 4 al.—Aeque—ut, a rare combination, and unworthy of imitation (in authors of the class. per. its reception rests, for the most part, upon false readings for aeque et or aeque ac), as much as, like, cui nihil aeque in causis agendis ut brevitas placet, Plin. Ep. 1, 20, 1 Keil. accinctus aeque ut discinctus, Vulg. 3 Reg. 20, 11. Possidebitis eam (terram) singuli aeque ut frater suus, ib. Ezech. 47, 14:(η).idemque proficeret aeque ut rosaceum,
Plin. 23, 4, 45, § 89, where Jan reads proficeret quod rosaceum. —In Plaut. once aeque—quasi for the class. aeque ac. quem videam aeque esse maestum quasi dies si dicta sit, Plaut. As. 5, 1, 11 Fleck.—Sometimes aeque—aeque, as well as, as much as. aeque pauperibus prodest, locupletibus aeque, Hor. Ep. 1, 1, 25:2.aeque discordiam praepositorum, aeque concordiam subjectis exitiosam,
Tac. Agr. 15.—The comparison is often to be supplied from the whole sentence or context; hence, aeque stands absol. for aeque ac, etc. (ante-class. freq.; also in Cic. and Liv.), equally, as much as, as: eadem oratio non aeque valet, Enn. ap. Gell. 11, 4 (from Eurip. Hec. 295: logos... ou tauton sthenei):3.satin habes, si feminarum nullast quam aeque diligam?
Plaut. Am. 1, 3, 11: Aetna mons non aeque altus, id. Mil. 4, 2, 73; 4, 7, 10; id. Most. 1, 3, 85, etc.; Ter. Phorm. 3, 3, 32; Cic. Fam. 4, 6, 1; so id. ib. 5, 21; id. Fin. 4, 33, 62:aeque sons,
Liv. 29, 19, 2;so 29, 19, 4 al.: aeque non est dubium,
it is as little doubtful, Plin. 2, 15, 13, § 68.—With omnes, uterque, and definite numerals, to indicate that a thing applies equally to all the objects designated, equally:4.non omnia eadem aeque omnibus suavia esse scito,
Plaut. As. 3, 3, 51; Ter. Hec. 2, 1, 2; so Cic. Off. 2, 8, 31; id. Fin. 4, 27, 75 al.:etsi utrique nostrum prope aeque gratae erant (litterae),
id. Fam. 13, 18; so id. Quint. 28, 86; Verg. G. 3, 118; Ov. Tr. 3, 8, 33; id. Fast. 1, 226:aeque ambo pares,
Plaut. Men. 5, 9, 60:duae trabes aeque longae,
Caes. B. C. 2, 10; Suet. Aug. 101. —Sometimes absol., with several substantives, alike, equally:5.Tragici et comici Numquam aeque sunt meditati,
Plaut. Pers. 4, 2, 4. imperium bonus ignavus aeque sibi exoptant, Sall. C. 11.—In Plaut. Capt. 3, 5, 42, nec est mihi quisquam, melius aeque cui velim, melius velle is, perhaps, to be taken together as a phrase, and the comp. considered as used in a restricted sense, as in melius est. Others consider the comp. as used for the simple positive; cf. adaeque.—B.Justly, with equity:► An old adverb.mihi id aeque factum arbitror,
Plaut. Mil. 5, 22 dub. (Ritschl: jureque id factum arbitror).— Comp.: ferro quam fame aequius perituros, more willingly, Sall. H. Fragm.— Sup.:aequissime jus dicere,
Aur. Vict. Epit. 11, 2:judicas ut qui aequissime,
Sid. 15, Ep. 11.form, aequĭter, also occurs: praeda per participes aequiter partita est, Liv. Andr. ap. Non. 512, 31; so Pac. ib., Att. ib., and Plaut. acc. to Prisc. 1010 P. -
8 aequus
aequus ( aecus, Pac. 32 Rib.; Lucr. 5, 1023 Lachm. and Munro; AIQVOS, S. C. de Bacch. 1. 26), a, um, adj. [formerly referred to EIKÔ, eoika, but Pott connects it with Sanscr. ēka = one, as if properly, one and uniform; others consider it as akin to aemulor, q. v.].I.A.. Of place, that extends or lies in a horizontal direction, plain, even, level, flat (esp. freq. in the strategic descriptions of the histt.;B. 1.syn.: planus, aequalis, aequabilis, par, similis, justus): locus ad libellam aequus,
level, Varr. R. R. 1, 6 fin.:aequus et planus locus,
Cic. Caec. 17 fin.:in aequum locum se demittere,
Caes. B. G. 7, 28: legio, quae paulo aequiore loco constiterat, id. ib. 7, 51:in aequum locum deducere,
Sall. J. 42 (cf. in Gr. eis to isoW katabainein, Xen. Anab. 4, 6, 18).— Trop.:sive loquitur ex inferiore loco sive aequo sive ex superiore,
i. e. before the judges, sitting on raised seats, or in the Senate, or in the assembly of the people from the rostra, Cic. de Or. 3, 6, 23:meos multos et ex superiore et ex aequo loco sermones habitos cum tuā summā laude,
from the tribune, and on private matters, id. Fam. 3, 8.—In the histt., sometimes subst.: aequum, i, n., with a gen., level ground, a plain:facilem in aequo campi victoriam fore,
Liv. 5, 38:ut primum agmen aequo, ceteri per acclive jugum insurgerent,
Tac. Agr. 35:in aequum digredi,
id. ib. 18:in aequo obstare,
id. ib. 36; id. H. 4, 23.—Also, an eminence, if it rises without inequalities:dum Romanae cohortes in aequum eniterentur,
up the slope, Tac. A. 2, 80.—As a level place is more favorable for military operations than an uneven one, aequus has the signif.,Of place:2.locum se aequum ad dimicandum dedisse,
Caes. B. C. 3, 73:etsi non aequum locum videbat suis,
Nep. Milt. 5, 4:non hic silvas nec paludes, sed aequis locis aequos deos,
Tac. A. 1, 68. —Of time: judicium aequiore tempore fieri oportere, more propitious, Cic. Corn. Fragm. ap. Ascon. p. 72:3.et tempore et loco aequo,
Liv. 26, 3:tempore aequo,
Suet. Caes. 35.—In gen., of persons or things (freq. and class.), favorable, kind, friendly, benevolent, etc.; constr. absol. with dat., or in and acc. (in poets in with abl.).(α).Absol.:(β).consequeris, ut eos ipsos, quos contra statuas, aequos placatosque dimittas,
Cic. Or. 10, 34:nobilitate inimica, non aequo senatu,
id. Q. Fr. 2, 3 med.:meis aequissimis utuntur auribus,
id. Fam. 7, 33:oculis aspicere aequis,
Verg. A. 4, 372:O dominum aequum et bonum,
Suet. Aug. 53:boni et aequi et faciles domini,
id. Tib. 29.—With dat.:(γ).aequa Venus Teucris, Pallas iniqua fuit,
Ov. Tr. 1, 2, 6; id. A. A. 2, 310.—With in and acc.:(δ).quis hoc statuit, quod aequum sit in Quintium, id iniquum esse in Maevium,
Cic. Quint. 14.—With in and abl.:4.victor erat quamvis, aequus in hoste fuit,
Prop. 4, 18, 28.—Hence,aequus, i, m. subst., a friend:II.ego ut me tibi amicissimum esse et aequi et iniqui intellegant, curabo,
both friends and enemies, Cic. Fam. 3, 6 fin.:aequis iniquisque persuasum erat,
Liv. 5, 45.That is equal to another in any quality, equal, like; and of things divided into two equal parts, a half:1.aequo censu censeri,
Plaut. Trin. 2, 4, 92:partīs,
Lucr. 3, 125; so Aur. Vict. Orig. 19, 1; and Vulg. 1 Reg. 30, 24:aequa erit mensura sagorum,
ib. Exod. 26, 8:pondera,
ib. Lev. 19, 36:portio,
ib. 2 Mach. 8, 30:aequa dementia,
Lucr. 1, 705 al.:aequā manu discedere,
to come off with equal advantage, Sall. C. 39; so,aequo Marte pugnare,
with equal success, Liv. 2, 6; Curt. 4, 15, 29; Flor. 4, 2, 48 al.:urbs erat in summo nubibus aequa jugo,
Ov. P. 4, 7, 24:aequum vulnus utrique tulit,
id. M. 9, 719 (cf. id. ib. 7, 803:aequales urebant pectora flammae): sequiturque patrem non passibus aequis,
Verg. A. 2, 724:pars aequa mundi,
Plin. 2, 19, 17, § 81:utinam esset mihi pars aequa amoris tecum, i. e. aeque vicissim amaremus,
Ter. Eun. 1, 2, 12:non tertiam portionem, verum aequam,
Plin. 3, 1, 1, § 5 al. —Hence the adverbial phrases,Ex aequo, in like manner, in an equal degree, equally ( = ex isou, Hdt., Dem.), Lucr. 1, 854:2.dixit et ex aequo donis formaque probata, etc.,
Ov. H. 16, 87; 20, 123; id. Am. 1, 10, 33; id. A. A. 2, 682; id. M. 3, 145; 4, 62; Liv. 36, 37:adversarum rerum ex aequo socii sunt (Fosi Cheruscis), cum in secundis minores fuissent,
Tac. G. 36 fin. —In aequo esse or stare, to be equal:B.qui cogit mori nolentem, in aequo est, quique properantem impedit,
Sen. Phoen. 98:ut naturam oderint, quod infra deos sumus, quod non in aequo illis stetimus,
id. Ben. 2, 29: in aequo ponere aliquem alicui, to make equal, to put on an equality, to compare:in aequo eum (Philopoemenem) summis imperatoribus posuerunt,
Liv. 39, 50 fin. —Morally.1.Of persons, fair, equitable, impartial in conduct toward others (diff. from justus, just; v. aequitas, II.); constr. absol., with dat.; more rarely with gen.:2.praetor aequus et sapiens,
Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 65; 2, 5, 59:aequissimus aestimator et judex,
id. Fin. 3, 2:praebere se aequum alicui,
id. Fam. 2, 1:absentium aequi, praesentibus mobiles,
benevolent toward, Tac. A. 6, 36.—Of things, fair, right, equitable, reasonable: ITA. SENATVS. AIQVOM. CENSVIT., S. C. de Bach. 1. 26: et aecum et rectum est, Pac. ap. Non. 261, 13 (Trag. Rel. p. 81 Rib.):3.aequa et honesta postulatio,
Cic. Rosc. Am. 2:quod justum est et aequum, servis praestate,
just and fair, Vulg. Col. 4, 1:postulo primum id, quod aequissimum est, ut, etc.,
Cic. Clu. 2:aequa lex et omnibus utilis,
id. Balb. 27:aequissimis legibus monere,
Aur. Vict. Caes. 9, 5:aequae conditiones,
Vell. 2, 25; see Fischer, Gr. II. 611.—Hence,ae-quum, i, n. subst., what is fair, equitable, or just; fairness, equity, or justice, etc.: jus atque aequum, Enn. ap. Non. p. 399, 10 (Trag. v. 224 Vahl.):4.utilitas justi prope mater et aequi,
Hor. S. 1, 3, 98:aequi studium,
Aur. Vict. Caes. 24, 6.—Often with comparatives, more than is right, proper, reasonable:lamentari amplius aequo,
Lucr. 3, 966:injurias gravius aequo habere,
to feel too deeply, Sall. C. 50:potus largius aequo,
Hor. Ep. 2, 2, 215.—Hence, aequum est, it is reasonable, proper, right, etc.; constr. with acc. and inf., in good prose also with dat. pers. and ut, Rudd. II. p. 235, n. 21: nos quiescere aequom est, Enn. ap. Diom. p. 382 P. (Trag. v. 199 Vahl.):quae liberum scire aequom est adulescentem,
Ter. Eun. 3, 2, 25:significant Imbecillorum esse aecum misererier omnīs,
Lucr. 5, 1023:non est aequum nos derelinquere verbum Dei,
Vulg. Act. 6, 2:aequius est mori quam auctoritatem imperii foedare,
Aur. Vict. Epit. 12, 7:ut peritis? Ut piscatorem aequomst (sc. perire), fame sitique speque,
Plaut. Rud. 2, 2, 7; so,sicut aequum est homini de potestate deorum timide et pauca dicamus,
Cic. Imp. Pomp. 16, 47.—In Plaut., with abl.:plus vidissem quam med atque illo aequom foret,
would be becoming in me and him, Plaut. Bacch. 3, 3, 84; id. Rud. prol. 47.—Aequum as subst. very freq. with bonum = aequitas, equitable conduct toward others, fairness, equity, etc.:C.neque quidquam queo aequi bonique ab eo impetrare,
what is right and just, Plaut. Curc. 1, 1, 65:cum de jure civili, cum de aequo et bono disputaretur,
Cic. Brut. 38:ex aequo et bono, non ex callido versutoque jure rem judicari oportere,
id. Caecin. 23:fit reus magis ex aequo bonoque quam ex jure gentium,
in accordance with justice and equity, Sall. J. 35.— Also without et:illi dolum malum, illi fidem bonam, illi aequum bonum tradiderunt,
Cic. Top. 17.—So also, aequius melius, according to greater equily, Cic. Off. 3, 15; id. Top. 17.—Of a state of mind, even, unruffled, calm, composed, tranquil, patient, enduring (cf. aequitas, II. B.);1.esp. freq. with animus or mens: animus aequos optumum est aerumnae condimentum,
Plaut. Rud. 2, 3, 71:concedo et quod animus aequus est et quia necesse est,
Cic. Rosc. Am. 50:quodadest memento Componere aequus,
Hor. C. 3, 29, 32:tentantem majora, fere praesentibus aequum,
id. Ep. 1, 17, 24;and so, aequam memento rebus in arduis Servare mentem, etc.,
id. C. 2, 3, 1.—Esp. freq. in the adv. abl.: aequo (aequiore, aequissimo) animo, with even mind, with equanimity, patiently, calmly, quietly, with forbearance: ego, nisi Bibulus adniteretur de triumpho, aequo animo essem, nunc vero aischron siôpan, Cic. Att. 6, 8:carere aequo animo aliquā re,
id. Brut. 6:ferre aliquid,
Nep. Dion. 6, 7; Aur. Vict. Orig. 6, 3:accipere,
Sall. C. 3, 2:tolerare,
id. J. 31:quo aequiore animo Germanicus celerem successionem operiretur,
Suet. Tib. 25:testem se in judiciis interrogari aequissimo animo patiebatur,
id. Aug. 56.—In eccl. Lat. = bono animo:aequo animo esto,
be of good cheer, Vulg. 3 Reg. 21, 7:aequo animo (aliquis) est? Psallat,
ib. Jacob. 5, 13.—Hence: aequi bonique facere aliquid, to regard as fair and reasonable (prop., a gen. of value, Roby, § 1191), to put up with, be content with, submit to, acquiesce in, etc.:istuc aequi bonique facio,
Ter. Heaut. 4, 5, 40: tranquillissimus animus meus totum istuc aequi boni [p. 59] facit, Cic. Att. 7, 7; Liv. 34, 22 fin.:aequi istuc faciam,
it will be all the same to me, Plaut. Mil. 3, 1, 189.—So also:aequi bonique dicere,
to propose any thing reasonable, Ter. Phorm. 4, 3, 32.—Hence, aequē, adv., in like manner, equally, just as = ex aequo, pariter, Gr. isôs, omoiôs (indicating the entire equality of two objects compared, while similiter denotes only likeness):eā (benevolentiā) non pariter omnes egemus... honore et gloriā fortasse non aeque omnes egent,
Cic. Off. 2, 8, 30:non possum ego non aut proxime atque ille aut etiam aeque laborare,
id. Fam. 9, 13, 2:universa aeque eveniunt justo et impio,
Vulg. Eccl. 9, 2.In the comic poets with cum or the comp. abl. (cf. adaeque); in Cic. and good class. authors gen. with et, atque, ac, ac si; less class. with quam, ut, quam ut; in Petr. with tamquam.(α).Aeque—cum:(β).animum advorte, ut aeque mecum haec scias,
Plaut. As. 2, 2, 66, id. Poen. prol. 47: novi aeque omnia tecum, Ter Phorm. 5, 9, 43. But in Plaut. As. 4, 1, 26, tecum una postea aeque pocla potitet, una belongs with tecum to potitet, and aeque is put absol. (sc. ut tu).—Aeque with comp. abl.:(γ).nullus est hoc meticulosus aeque,
as this person, Plaut. Am. 1, 1, 137:qui me in terrā aeque fortunatus erit,
id. Curc. 1, 2, 51.—Aeque—et or aeque— que (as in Gr. ison kai, isa kai, Soph. Oed. Tyr. 611;(δ).Thuc. 3, 14). nisi aeque amicos et nosmet ipsos diligamus,
equally as ourselves, Cic. Fin. 1, 20, 67. versūs aeque prima et media et extrema pars attenditur, id. de Or. 3, 50, 192; id. Rosc. Com. 1, 2; so id. Mur. 13, 28; id. Clu. 69, 195, id. Tusc. 2, 26, 62 al.:quod Aeque neglectum pueris senibusque nocebit,
Hor. Ep. 1, 1, 26.—Aeque—atque, —ac, —ac si, as... as; as much as, as: vide ne, quem tu esse hebetem deputes aeque ac pecus, is, etc., Att. ap. Cic. Div. 1, 22, 45: pumex non aeque aridus atque hic est senex, Plaut Aul. 2, 4, 18; Ter. Phorm 1, 2, 43; Varr. R. R. 3, 8, 2:(ε).nisi haberes, qui illis aeque ac tu ipse gauderet,
Cic. Lael. 6, 22:sed me colit et observat aeque atque patronum suum,
id. Fam. 13, 69; 2, 2; so id. Brut. 71, 248; id. Rosc. Am. 40, 116; Cels. 6, 15; Tac. H. 4, 5; Suet. Caes. 12 al.: aeque ac si. with the subj., just as if. altogether as if:Egnatii absentis rem ut tueare, aeque a te peto ac si mea negotia essent,
Cic. Fam. 13, 43, 3; Auct Her 2, 13, 19: quo factum est, ut jumenta aeque nitida ex castellis educeret ac si in campestribus ea locis habuisset, Nep Eum. 5. 6; Liv. 10, 7, 4; 44, 22, 5 al.—Aeque— quam (only in Plaut. and prose writers from the Aug. per.;(ζ).neither in Cic. nor in Cæs.),
as... as, in the same manner as, as well... as, like, Plaut. Mil. 2, 5, 55;nullum esse agrum aeque feracem quam hic est,
id. Epid. 2, 3, 1:nihil aeque eos terruit quam robur et color imperatoris,
Liv. 28, 26, 14, 5, 6, 11; so 5, 3, 4; 31, 1, 3;in navibus posita aeque quam in aedificiis,
Plin. 2, 81, 83, § 196; so 2, 70, 72, § 180; Tac. A. 14, 38; id. H. 2, 10; 4, 52; Suet. Aug. 64, 89; id. Galb. 4 al.—Aeque—ut, a rare combination, and unworthy of imitation (in authors of the class. per. its reception rests, for the most part, upon false readings for aeque et or aeque ac), as much as, like, cui nihil aeque in causis agendis ut brevitas placet, Plin. Ep. 1, 20, 1 Keil. accinctus aeque ut discinctus, Vulg. 3 Reg. 20, 11. Possidebitis eam (terram) singuli aeque ut frater suus, ib. Ezech. 47, 14:(η).idemque proficeret aeque ut rosaceum,
Plin. 23, 4, 45, § 89, where Jan reads proficeret quod rosaceum. —In Plaut. once aeque—quasi for the class. aeque ac. quem videam aeque esse maestum quasi dies si dicta sit, Plaut. As. 5, 1, 11 Fleck.—Sometimes aeque—aeque, as well as, as much as. aeque pauperibus prodest, locupletibus aeque, Hor. Ep. 1, 1, 25:2.aeque discordiam praepositorum, aeque concordiam subjectis exitiosam,
Tac. Agr. 15.—The comparison is often to be supplied from the whole sentence or context; hence, aeque stands absol. for aeque ac, etc. (ante-class. freq.; also in Cic. and Liv.), equally, as much as, as: eadem oratio non aeque valet, Enn. ap. Gell. 11, 4 (from Eurip. Hec. 295: logos... ou tauton sthenei):3.satin habes, si feminarum nullast quam aeque diligam?
Plaut. Am. 1, 3, 11: Aetna mons non aeque altus, id. Mil. 4, 2, 73; 4, 7, 10; id. Most. 1, 3, 85, etc.; Ter. Phorm. 3, 3, 32; Cic. Fam. 4, 6, 1; so id. ib. 5, 21; id. Fin. 4, 33, 62:aeque sons,
Liv. 29, 19, 2;so 29, 19, 4 al.: aeque non est dubium,
it is as little doubtful, Plin. 2, 15, 13, § 68.—With omnes, uterque, and definite numerals, to indicate that a thing applies equally to all the objects designated, equally:4.non omnia eadem aeque omnibus suavia esse scito,
Plaut. As. 3, 3, 51; Ter. Hec. 2, 1, 2; so Cic. Off. 2, 8, 31; id. Fin. 4, 27, 75 al.:etsi utrique nostrum prope aeque gratae erant (litterae),
id. Fam. 13, 18; so id. Quint. 28, 86; Verg. G. 3, 118; Ov. Tr. 3, 8, 33; id. Fast. 1, 226:aeque ambo pares,
Plaut. Men. 5, 9, 60:duae trabes aeque longae,
Caes. B. C. 2, 10; Suet. Aug. 101. —Sometimes absol., with several substantives, alike, equally:5.Tragici et comici Numquam aeque sunt meditati,
Plaut. Pers. 4, 2, 4. imperium bonus ignavus aeque sibi exoptant, Sall. C. 11.—In Plaut. Capt. 3, 5, 42, nec est mihi quisquam, melius aeque cui velim, melius velle is, perhaps, to be taken together as a phrase, and the comp. considered as used in a restricted sense, as in melius est. Others consider the comp. as used for the simple positive; cf. adaeque.—B.Justly, with equity:► An old adverb.mihi id aeque factum arbitror,
Plaut. Mil. 5, 22 dub. (Ritschl: jureque id factum arbitror).— Comp.: ferro quam fame aequius perituros, more willingly, Sall. H. Fragm.— Sup.:aequissime jus dicere,
Aur. Vict. Epit. 11, 2:judicas ut qui aequissime,
Sid. 15, Ep. 11.form, aequĭter, also occurs: praeda per participes aequiter partita est, Liv. Andr. ap. Non. 512, 31; so Pac. ib., Att. ib., and Plaut. acc. to Prisc. 1010 P.
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