-
61 conportatio
transportation; bringing/carrying together (L+S) -
62 convectio
carrying/bringing together -
63 daduchus
priest carrying torch (who guided initiates to-be at the Eleusinian mystries) -
64 deportatio
deportation, conveyance to exile; taking/carrying home/away; transportation -
65 deportio
carrying, conveying; conveyance; transportation -
66 esecutio
performance, carrying out; enforcement (law), act to right wrong; discussion -
67 executio
performance, carrying out; enforcement (law), act to right wrong; discussion -
68 fercuium
frame or stretcher for carrying things; dish; course (at dinner) -
69 persecutio
chase/pursuit; carrying through, completion; action/right of suing, suit; persecution (esp. of Christians); suffering (Bee) -
70 phalanga
roller to move ships/military engines; carrying pole; cut length of wood/rod -
71 spicifer
spicifera, spiciferum ADJcarrying heads/ears of corn/cereal -
72 sustentatus
support, sustaining, bearing/carrying; keeping erect/upright; hangings/drapes -
73 transmigratio
removal to another country; emigration; revoval/carrying away; captive (Plater) -
74 gestum
(gero)I.carrying about, conduct (oneself).II.carriage, bearing / having borne. -
75 abductio
abductĭo, ōnis, f. [abduco, I.B. 3.].I.A foroible carrying off, ravishing, robbing, Cod. Th. 4, 8, 5, § 5; 11, 10, 1. —2.(Of a woman.) Abduction: in abductione Hesionae, Dares Phryg. 4. —II.A retirement, Vulg. Eccli. 38, 20. -
76 absportatio
asportātĭo, ōnis, f. [asporto], a carrying away:signorum,
Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 49 fin. -
77 adgestum
1.aggestus ( adg-), ūs, m. [id.], a bearing or carrying to a place, a collecting, an accumulation, collection (post-Aug. and rare):2.pabuli, materiae, lignorum,
Tac. A. 1. 35:copiarum,
id. H. 3, 60:harenae,
Aur. Vict. Ep. 3.aggestus, i, m., or aggestum ( adg-), i, n. [id.], an elevation formed like a dike or mound:prunas unius aggesti inseruere juncturis,
Amm. 20, 11; 19, 8. -
78 adgestus
1.aggestus ( adg-), ūs, m. [id.], a bearing or carrying to a place, a collecting, an accumulation, collection (post-Aug. and rare):2.pabuli, materiae, lignorum,
Tac. A. 1. 35:copiarum,
id. H. 3, 60:harenae,
Aur. Vict. Ep. 3.aggestus, i, m., or aggestum ( adg-), i, n. [id.], an elevation formed like a dike or mound:prunas unius aggesti inseruere juncturis,
Amm. 20, 11; 19, 8. -
79 adportatio
apportātĭo ( adp-), ōnis, f. [apporto], a conveying, carrying to a place:ad urbem,
Vitr. 2, 9. -
80 aerumna
aerumna, ae (pleb. er-), f. [contr. from aegrimonia; as to the suppressed g, cf. jumentum from jugum, Doed. Syn. IV. p. 420. Others explain aerumna (with Paul. ex Fest. s. v. aerumnula, p. 24 Müll.) orig. for a frame for carrying burdens upon the back; hence trop.], need, want, trouble, toil, hardship, distress, tribulation, calamity, etc. (objectively; while aegrimonia, like aegritudo, denotes, subjectively, the condition of mind, Doed. 1. c.; for the most part only ante-class., except in Cic., who uses it several times, in order to designate by one word the many modifications and shadings of the condition of mental suffering; in Quintilian's time the word was obsolete, v. Quint. 8, 3, 26): tibi sunt ante ferendae aerumnae, Enn. ap. Cic. Div. 1, 20, 40 (Ann. v. 47 Vahl.); cf.: Ilia dia nepos, quas erumnas tetulisti, id. ap. Charis. p. 70 P. (Ann. v. 56 ib.): quantis cum aerumnis exantlavi diem, id. ap. Non. 292, 8 (Trag. v. 127 ib.):II.uno ut labore absolvat aerumnas duas (of the pains of parturition),
Plaut. Am. 1, 2, 26:animus aequos optimum est aerumnae condimentum,
id. Rud. 2, 3, 71; id. Ep. 2, 1, 10;so,
id. Capt. 5, 4, 12; id. Curc. 1, 2, 54; id. Pers. 1, 1, 1: lapit cor cura, aerumna corpus conficit, Pac. ap. Non. 23, 8; Ter. Hec. 3, 1, 8; Lucr. 3, 50:aerumna gravescit,
id. 4, 1065:quo pacto adversam aerumnam ferant,
Ter. Phorm. 2, 1, 12:maeror est aegritudo flebilis: aerumna aegritudo laboriosa: dolor aegritudo crucians,
Cic. Tusc. 4, 8, 18:Herculis aerumnas perpeti: sic enim majores nostri labores non fugiendos tristissimo tamen verbo aerumnas etiam in Deo nominaverunt,
id. Fin. 2, 35; cf. id. ib. 5, 32, 95:mors est aerumnarum requies,
Sall. C. 51, 20; so id. J. 13, 22: Luculli miles collecta viatica multis Aerumnis, ad assem Perdiderat, with much difficulty, * Hor. Ep. 2, 2, 26:multiplicabo aerumnas tuas,
Vulg. Gen. 3, 16:in labore et aerumnā (fui),
ib. 2 Cor. 11, 27.—In later Lat. for defeat (of an army), Amm. 15, 4; cf. id. 15, 8 al.► At a later period, also, ĕrumna was written with short e, Paulin.Petric. Vit. D. Mart. 1, 66. Hence, Enn. ap. Charis. p. 76 P. derives it from eruere (quod mentem eruat). Cf. Doed. Syn. IV. p. 420.
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