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a sacrificial banquet

  • 1 polluceo

    pollūcĕo, xi, ctum, 2, v. a. [old prep. port = Gr. proti, pros, and liceor; root licof linquo; Gr. leipô; cf. licet].
    I.
    Lit., in relig. lang., to place upon the altar as a sacrifice to the deity, to offer, offer up:

    Jovi dapali culignam vini quantumvis polluceto... cum pollucere oportebit, sic facies, etc.,

    Cato, R. R. 132: polluxi tibi iam publicando epulo Herculis decumas, Naev. ap. Prisc. p. 874 P. (Com. Rel. p. 9 Rib.):

    decumam partem Herculi,

    Plaut. Stich. 1, 3, 80: pisces, Cass. Hem. ap. Plin. 32, 2, 10, § 20:

    pollucere merces (quas cuivis deo) liceat, sunt far, polenta, vinum, panis fermentalis, ficus passa, suilla, bubula, agnina, casei, ovilla, alica, sesama et oleum, pisces quibus est squama praeter scarum: Herculi autem omnia esculenta, potulenta,

    Fest. p. 253 Müll.—
    II.
    Transf.
    A.
    To serve up as a dish: non ego sum pollucta pago, I am no dish for the village (like the Engl. saying, I am meat for your master), Plaut. Rud. 2, 4, 11.—
    B.
    To entertain, to treal with a thing (ante- and post-class.).
    * 1.
    Lit., jocosely:

    polluctus virgis servus,

    Plaut. Curc. 1, 3, 37.—
    * 2.
    Trop., to cause to share in or partake of, Arn. 5, 164.—Hence,
    A.
    pol-luctum, i, n., the thing offered, an offering; also, a sacrificial banquet:

    polluctum quod a porricendo est fictum. Cum enim ex mercibus libamenta porrecta sunt Herculi in aram, tum polluctum est,

    Varr. L. L. 6, § 54 Müll.: ad polluctum emere, Cass. Hem. ap. Plin. 32, 2, 10, § 20:

    polluctum Herculis,

    Macr. S. 2, 12 fin.; Plaut. Rud. 5, 3, 63.—
    B.
    polluctē, adv., with rich offerings, sumptuously, magnificently: pollucte prodigus, Plaut. Fragm. ap. Fest. s. v. prodegeris, p. 229 Müll. (dub.).

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > polluceo

  • 2 polluctum

    pollūcĕo, xi, ctum, 2, v. a. [old prep. port = Gr. proti, pros, and liceor; root licof linquo; Gr. leipô; cf. licet].
    I.
    Lit., in relig. lang., to place upon the altar as a sacrifice to the deity, to offer, offer up:

    Jovi dapali culignam vini quantumvis polluceto... cum pollucere oportebit, sic facies, etc.,

    Cato, R. R. 132: polluxi tibi iam publicando epulo Herculis decumas, Naev. ap. Prisc. p. 874 P. (Com. Rel. p. 9 Rib.):

    decumam partem Herculi,

    Plaut. Stich. 1, 3, 80: pisces, Cass. Hem. ap. Plin. 32, 2, 10, § 20:

    pollucere merces (quas cuivis deo) liceat, sunt far, polenta, vinum, panis fermentalis, ficus passa, suilla, bubula, agnina, casei, ovilla, alica, sesama et oleum, pisces quibus est squama praeter scarum: Herculi autem omnia esculenta, potulenta,

    Fest. p. 253 Müll.—
    II.
    Transf.
    A.
    To serve up as a dish: non ego sum pollucta pago, I am no dish for the village (like the Engl. saying, I am meat for your master), Plaut. Rud. 2, 4, 11.—
    B.
    To entertain, to treal with a thing (ante- and post-class.).
    * 1.
    Lit., jocosely:

    polluctus virgis servus,

    Plaut. Curc. 1, 3, 37.—
    * 2.
    Trop., to cause to share in or partake of, Arn. 5, 164.—Hence,
    A.
    pol-luctum, i, n., the thing offered, an offering; also, a sacrificial banquet:

    polluctum quod a porricendo est fictum. Cum enim ex mercibus libamenta porrecta sunt Herculi in aram, tum polluctum est,

    Varr. L. L. 6, § 54 Müll.: ad polluctum emere, Cass. Hem. ap. Plin. 32, 2, 10, § 20:

    polluctum Herculis,

    Macr. S. 2, 12 fin.; Plaut. Rud. 5, 3, 63.—
    B.
    polluctē, adv., with rich offerings, sumptuously, magnificently: pollucte prodigus, Plaut. Fragm. ap. Fest. s. v. prodegeris, p. 229 Müll. (dub.).

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > polluctum

  • 3 (daps)

        (daps) dapis, f    [3 DA-], a solemn feast, sacrificial feast: adhibiti ad dapem, L.: obligatam redde Iovi dapem, H.: pro grege ferre dapem, for the protection of the flock, Tb.— A feast, banquet, meal, viands, victuals: amor dapis, H.: humanā dape pavit equas, O.: cremantur dapes, V.: dapibus mensas onerare, V.

    Latin-English dictionary > (daps)

  • 4 dapis

    sacrificial feast/meal; feast, banquet; food composing it; food/meal of animals

    Latin-English dictionary > dapis

  • 5 daps

    sacrificial feast/meal; feast, banquet; food composing it; food/meal of animals

    Latin-English dictionary > daps

  • 6 dapis

    daps or dăpis, dăpis (nom. daps obsol. Paul. Diac. p. 68, 3: dapis, Juvenc. ap. Auct. de gen. nom. p. 78.—The gen. pl. and dat. sing. do not occur, but are supplied by epulae, cena, convivium, q. v.), f. [stem, dap-, Gr. dapanê, expense: cf. deipnon; R. da-, Gr. daiô, to distribute; Sanscr. dapajami, to cause to divide], a solemn feast for religious purposes, a sacrificial feast (before beginning to till the ground; the Greek proêrosia, made in honor of some divinity, in memory of departed friends, etc. Thus distinguished from epulae, a meal of any kind: convivium, a meal or feast for company; epulum, a formal or public dinner, v. h. v.).
    I.
    Prop.:

    dapem pro bubus piro florente facito... postea dape facta serito milium, panicum, alium, lentim,

    Cato R. R. 131 and 132; id. ib. 50 fin.:

    pro grege,

    an offering for the protection of the flock, Tib. 1, 5, 28; Liv. 1, 7 ad fin.:

    ergo obligatam redde Jovi dapem,

    Hor. Od. 2, 7, 17:

    nunc Saliaribus Ornare pulvinar deorum Tempus erat dapibus,

    id. ib. 1, 37, 4:

    sollemnis dapes et tristia dona,

    Verg. A. 3, 301.
    II.
    Transf. by the poets and post-Augustan prose-writers beyond the sphere of religion, and used of every (esp. rich, sumptuous) meal, a feast, banquet, in the sing. and plur. (in Verg. passim, in Tibul. in this signif. only plur.).—
    (α).
    Sing.: ne cum tyranno quisquam... eandem vescatur dapem, Att. ap. Non. 415, 25 (v. 217 Ribbeck): quae haec daps est? qui festus dies? Liv. Andr. ap. Prisc. p. 752 P. (transl. of Hom. Od. 1, 225: tis daïs, tis de homilos hod epleto); so Catull. 64, 305; Hor. Od. 4, 4, 12; id. Epod. 5, 33; id. Ep. 1, 17, 51: of a simple, poor meal, Ov. H. 9, 68; 16, 206. Opp. to wine:

    nunc dape, nunc posito mensae nituere Lyaeo,

    Ov. F. 5, 521; cf.

    so in plur.,

    id. M. 8, 571; Verg. A. 1, 706.—
    (β).
    Plur.: Tib. 1, 5, 49; 1, 10, 8; Verg. E. 6, 79; id. G. 4, 133; id. A. 1, 210 et saep.; Hor. Od. 1, 32, 13; id. Epod. 2, 48; Ov. M. 5, 113; 6, 664; Tac. A. 14, 22 et saep.:

    humanae,

    human excrement, Plin. 17, 9, 6, § 51.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > dapis

  • 7 daps

    daps or dăpis, dăpis (nom. daps obsol. Paul. Diac. p. 68, 3: dapis, Juvenc. ap. Auct. de gen. nom. p. 78.—The gen. pl. and dat. sing. do not occur, but are supplied by epulae, cena, convivium, q. v.), f. [stem, dap-, Gr. dapanê, expense: cf. deipnon; R. da-, Gr. daiô, to distribute; Sanscr. dapajami, to cause to divide], a solemn feast for religious purposes, a sacrificial feast (before beginning to till the ground; the Greek proêrosia, made in honor of some divinity, in memory of departed friends, etc. Thus distinguished from epulae, a meal of any kind: convivium, a meal or feast for company; epulum, a formal or public dinner, v. h. v.).
    I.
    Prop.:

    dapem pro bubus piro florente facito... postea dape facta serito milium, panicum, alium, lentim,

    Cato R. R. 131 and 132; id. ib. 50 fin.:

    pro grege,

    an offering for the protection of the flock, Tib. 1, 5, 28; Liv. 1, 7 ad fin.:

    ergo obligatam redde Jovi dapem,

    Hor. Od. 2, 7, 17:

    nunc Saliaribus Ornare pulvinar deorum Tempus erat dapibus,

    id. ib. 1, 37, 4:

    sollemnis dapes et tristia dona,

    Verg. A. 3, 301.
    II.
    Transf. by the poets and post-Augustan prose-writers beyond the sphere of religion, and used of every (esp. rich, sumptuous) meal, a feast, banquet, in the sing. and plur. (in Verg. passim, in Tibul. in this signif. only plur.).—
    (α).
    Sing.: ne cum tyranno quisquam... eandem vescatur dapem, Att. ap. Non. 415, 25 (v. 217 Ribbeck): quae haec daps est? qui festus dies? Liv. Andr. ap. Prisc. p. 752 P. (transl. of Hom. Od. 1, 225: tis daïs, tis de homilos hod epleto); so Catull. 64, 305; Hor. Od. 4, 4, 12; id. Epod. 5, 33; id. Ep. 1, 17, 51: of a simple, poor meal, Ov. H. 9, 68; 16, 206. Opp. to wine:

    nunc dape, nunc posito mensae nituere Lyaeo,

    Ov. F. 5, 521; cf.

    so in plur.,

    id. M. 8, 571; Verg. A. 1, 706.—
    (β).
    Plur.: Tib. 1, 5, 49; 1, 10, 8; Verg. E. 6, 79; id. G. 4, 133; id. A. 1, 210 et saep.; Hor. Od. 1, 32, 13; id. Epod. 2, 48; Ov. M. 5, 113; 6, 664; Tac. A. 14, 22 et saep.:

    humanae,

    human excrement, Plin. 17, 9, 6, § 51.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > daps

  • 8 Epulo

    1.
    ĕpŭlo, ōnis (also EPOLONUS, i, acc. to Paul. ex Fest. p. 78, 11 Müll.), m. [epulum], a guest at a feast or banquet, a feaster, carouser.
    I.
    In gen. (mostly post-class.), Cic. Att. 2, 7, 3; App. M. 2, p. 123; 9, p. 235; Firm. Math. 5, 4 fin. —Far more freq.,
    II.
    In partic.: Tresviri or Septemviri Epulones (in inscrr. also SEPTEMVIR and SEPTEMVIRI [VII. VIR.] EPVLONVM), a t. t. of relig. lang., a college of priests, composed at first of three and afterwards of seven persons, who superintended the sacrificial banquets to the gods, Cic. de Or. 3, 19 fin.; Gell. 1, 12, 6; cf. Plin. Ep. 2, 11, 12; Luc. 1, 602; Inscr. Orell. 590; 773; 2259 sq.; Calend. Praenest. Jan. (Orell. Inscr. 2, p. 382).—In sing.: Epulo, Enn. ap. Varr. L. L. 6, § 82 Müll. N. cr.:

    Triumvir Epulo,

    Liv. 40, 42:

    tres viri epulones,

    id. 33, 42, 1:

    VII. VIRO. EPVLONI,

    Inscr. Orell. 2365.
    2.
    Epŭlo, ōnis, m., a proper name, Verg. A. 12, 459.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > Epulo

  • 9 epulo

    1.
    ĕpŭlo, ōnis (also EPOLONUS, i, acc. to Paul. ex Fest. p. 78, 11 Müll.), m. [epulum], a guest at a feast or banquet, a feaster, carouser.
    I.
    In gen. (mostly post-class.), Cic. Att. 2, 7, 3; App. M. 2, p. 123; 9, p. 235; Firm. Math. 5, 4 fin. —Far more freq.,
    II.
    In partic.: Tresviri or Septemviri Epulones (in inscrr. also SEPTEMVIR and SEPTEMVIRI [VII. VIR.] EPVLONVM), a t. t. of relig. lang., a college of priests, composed at first of three and afterwards of seven persons, who superintended the sacrificial banquets to the gods, Cic. de Or. 3, 19 fin.; Gell. 1, 12, 6; cf. Plin. Ep. 2, 11, 12; Luc. 1, 602; Inscr. Orell. 590; 773; 2259 sq.; Calend. Praenest. Jan. (Orell. Inscr. 2, p. 382).—In sing.: Epulo, Enn. ap. Varr. L. L. 6, § 82 Müll. N. cr.:

    Triumvir Epulo,

    Liv. 40, 42:

    tres viri epulones,

    id. 33, 42, 1:

    VII. VIRO. EPVLONI,

    Inscr. Orell. 2365.
    2.
    Epŭlo, ōnis, m., a proper name, Verg. A. 12, 459.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > epulo

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