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a slice

  • 1 secō

        secō cuī, ctus, āre    [2 SAC-], to cut, cut off, cut up, reap, carve: omne animal secari ac dividi potest: pabulum secari non posse, Cs.: sectae herbae, H.: Quo gestu gallina secetur, is carved, Iu.: secto elephanto, i. e. carved ivory, V.: prave sectus unguis, H.—Esp., in surgery, to cut, operate on, cut off, cut out, amputate, excise: in corpore alqd: varices Mario: Marius cum secaretur, was operated on. — To scratch, tear, wound, hurt, injure: luctantis acuto ne secer ungui, lest I should be torn, H.: sectas invenit ungue genas, O.: secuerunt corpora vepres, V.— To cut apart, divide, cleave, separate: curru medium agmen, V.: caelum secant zonae, O.: sectus orbis, i. e. half the earth, H.— To cut through, run through, pass through, traverse: per maria umida nando Libycum, cleave, V.: aequor Puppe, O.: adeunt vada nota secantes, O.— To cut, make by cutting: fugā secuit sub nubibus arcum, i. e. produce by flight, V.: viam ad navīs, i. e. speeds on his way, V.—Fig., to divide: causas in plura genera.— To cut short, decide, settle: Quo multae secantur iudice lites, H.— To follow, pursue: quam quisque secat spem, V.
    * * *
    I
    secare, secavi, secatus V TRANS
    cut, sever; decide; divide in two/halve/split; slice/chop/cut up/carve; detach
    II
    secare, secui, sectus V TRANS
    cut, sever; decide; divide in two/halve/split; slice/chop/cut up/carve; detach

    Latin-English dictionary > secō

  • 2 ās

       ās assis, m    [2 AC-], one, a whole, unity; hence (late), ex asse heres, of the entire estate. — Esp., the unit of money, orig. one pound of copper; reduced by depreciations to half an ounce; a penny: assem dare: vilis, H.: ad assem, to the last copper, H.: assem negat daturum, a farthing.
    * * *
    penny, copper coin; a pound; one, whole, unit; circular flap/valve; round slice

    Latin-English dictionary > ās

  • 3 lāmina or lammina or lāmna

        lāmina or lammina or lāmna ae, f    a thin slice, plate, leaf, layer, lamina: cum lamina esset inventa: tigna laminis clavisque religant, Cs.: aenea, L.: Laminae ardentes, red-hot plates (for torture): candens, H.—A blade: argutae lamina serrae, V.: Lamina dissiluit, the blade of the sword, O.—Money, coin: argenti, O.: fulva, a gold piece, O.: inimicus lamnae, foe to money, H.—The tender shell of an unripe nut, O.

    Latin-English dictionary > lāmina or lammina or lāmna

  • 4 absegmen

    piece/slice/hunk of meat, collop; morsel, portion, lump, mouthful, gobbet

    Latin-English dictionary > absegmen

  • 5 apsegmen

    piece/slice/hunk of meat, collop; morsel, portion, lump, mouthful, gobbet

    Latin-English dictionary > apsegmen

  • 6 ascio

    I
    asciare, -, - V TRANS
    chop/slice with a trowel
    II
    ascire, -, - V TRANS
    take to/up; associate, admit; adopt as one's own; take upon (General's) staff

    Latin-English dictionary > ascio

  • 7 assis

    I
    penny, copper coin; a pound; one, whole; circular flap/valve; round slice
    II
    plank, board

    Latin-English dictionary > assis

  • 8 segmentum

    segmentum, i, n. [seco], a cutting, cut; a piece cut off, a slice (not ante-Aug.; mostly in the plur.; syn.: fragmentum, frustum).
    I.
    In gen.:

    crassior harena laxioribus segmentis terit et plus erodit marmoris,

    Plin. 36, 6, 9, § 53; so,

    segmenta percae,

    Aus. Idyll. 10, 118.—
    II.
    In partic.
    A.
    A strip, zone, segment of the earth:

    plura sunt haec segmenta mundi, quae nostri circulos appellavere, Graeci parallelos,

    Plin. 6, 34, 39, § 212:

    quinto continentur segmento Bactra, Iberia, Armenia, etc.,

    id. 6, 34, 39, § 216.—
    B.
    In plur., strips of tinsel, brocade, etc., sewed around the bottom of a woman's dress; trimmings, bands, flounces, purfles, Ov. A. A. 3, 169:

    segmenta et longos habitus et flammea sumit,

    Juv. 2, 124:

    aurea,

    Val. Max. 5, 2, 1: crepitantia, Sed. Ep. 8, 6 med.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > segmentum

См. также в других словарях:

  • Slice — may refer to:Food*A portion of bread, cake, or meat that is cut flat and thin, cf. sliced bread *Slice (soft drink), a line of fruit flavored drinks *Vanilla slice, a dessert *Mr. Slice, the mascot of Papa John s pizza restaurantports*Backspin,… …   Wikipedia

  • slice — [ slajs ] n. m. • 1924 golf; mot angl. « tranche » ♦ Anglic. Effet donné à une balle de tennis en la frappant latéralement et de haut en bas. ● slice nom masculin (anglais slice) Effet latéral donné à une balle, au tennis, au golf. ⇒SLICE, subst …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Slice — 〈[ slaıs] m.; , s [ sız]; Sp.; Tennis; Golf〉 Schlag, bei dem der Ball angeschnitten wird [engl., „schneiden“] * * * Slice [sla̮is ], der; , s […sɪs] [engl. slice, eigtl. = Schnitte, Scheibe]: 1. (Golf) a) …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Slice — Slice, n. [OE. slice, sclice, OF. esclice, from esclicier, esclichier, to break to pieces, of German origin; cf. OHG. sl[=i]zan to split, slit, tear, G. schleissen to slit. See {Slit}, v. t.] 1. A thin, broad piece cut off; as, a slice of bacon;… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Slice bar — Slice Slice, n. [OE. slice, sclice, OF. esclice, from esclicier, esclichier, to break to pieces, of German origin; cf. OHG. sl[=i]zan to split, slit, tear, G. schleissen to slit. See {Slit}, v. t.] 1. A thin, broad piece cut off; as, a slice of… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • slice — [slaɪs] noun [countable] a part or share of something: slice of • Sales reps will get a slice of any catalogue sales to customers in their area. * * * slice UK US /slaɪs/ noun [C, usually singular] INFORMAL ► a part or share of som …   Financial and business terms

  • slice — [slīs] n. [ME < OFr esclice < esclicier, to slice < Frank slizzan, akin to SLIT] 1. a relatively thin, broad piece cut from an object having some bulk or volume [a slice of apple] 2. a part, portion, or share [a slice of one s earnings]… …   English World dictionary

  • slice off — ˌslice ˈoff [transitive] [present tense I/you/we/they slice off he/she/it slices off present participle slicing off past tense …   Useful english dictionary

  • slice and dice — see ↑slice, 2 • • • Main Entry: ↑dice slice and dice chiefly US : to divide something into many small parts especially so you can use the result for your own purposes You can slice and dice the data any way you want. • • • Main Entry: ↑slice …   Useful english dictionary

  • slice something off — ˌslice sthˈoff/aˈway | ˌslice sth ˈoff sth derived to cut sth from a larger piece • Slice a piece off. • Slice away the corners. • (figurative) He sliced two seconds off the world …   Useful english dictionary

  • slice something away — ˌslice sthˈoff/aˈway | ˌslice sth ˈoff sth derived to cut sth from a larger piece • Slice a piece off. • Slice away the corners. • (figurative) He sliced two seconds off the world …   Useful english dictionary

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