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1 fuga
fuga ae, f [2 FVG-], a fleeing, flight, running away: adornare fugam, T.: ab urbe turpissima: desperata: exercitūs foeda, S.: dant sese in fugam milites: fugam capere, Cs.: parare: hostīs dare in fugam, put to flight, Cs.: in fugam conicere, Cs.: impellere in fugam: cum terrorem fugamque fecisset, caused a panic, L.: fugam ex ripā fecit, drove (the foe), L.: fugam faciunt, take flight, S.: neque hostium fugam reprimi posse, be checked, Cs.: opportunior fugae collis, S.: naves eius fugā se Adrumetum receperunt, after his flight, Cs.: quantae in periculis fugae proximorum: celeres fugae, H.— Expatriation, exile, banishment: se in fugam coniecisse: Aristidi: exsilia et fugae, Ta.— A flying, swift course, rapid motion, speed: Harpalyce volucrem fugā praevertitur Hebrum, V.: facilis, a swift voyage, V.: (Neptunus) fugam dedit, a swift passage, V.: fugam dant nubila caelo, flee away, V.: temporum, flight, H.: (equus) Clara ante alios, Iu.— A place of banishment, refuge: toto quaeret in orbe fugam, O.— A means of removal, remedy: morbi, H.—Fig., a fleeing, avoiding, avoidance, shunning, escape: laborum: turpitudinis: alia honoris, honorable way of escape, L.: leti, H.* * *flight, fleeing, escape; avoidance; exile; fugue (music) -
2 dēclīnātiō
dēclīnātiō ōnis, f [declino], a bending aside, turning away, averting: tuas petitiones parvā declinatione effugi: atomi: corporis, Cu.—Fig., a turning away, avoiding, avoidance: a malis naturā declinamus; quae declinatio, etc.: laboris. — In rhet., a slight deviation (from the direct argument): a proposito: ad amplificandum.— A rejection, qualification (of a word or phrase).* * *declination/relative sky angle; latitude; compass point; inclination; bend/slope turning aside, swerve; advoidance; divergence/variation/digression; inflection -
3 effugium
effugium ī, n [ex + 2 FVG-], a fleeing, flight, escape, avoidance, way of escape, means of flight: mortis: pennarum, by means of: naves peritis nandi dedissent effugium, L.: ad effugium navem habere, L.: in publicum, L.: reperire effugium malo, Ph.: poenas ob nostra reposcent Effugia, V.* * *flight; way of escape -
4 vītābilis
vītābilis e, adj. [vito], to be shunned, worthy of avoidance: Ascra, O.* * *vitabilis, vitabile ADJ -
5 vītātiō
vītātiō ōnis, f [vito], a shunning, avoidance: doloris. -
6 declinatio
dēclīnātĭo, ōnis, f. [id.], a bending from a thing, a bending aside; an oblique inclination or direction (good prose).I.Lit.:B.lanceam exigua corporis declinatione vitare,
Curt. 9, 7 fin.; cf.:quot ego tuas petitiones parva quadam declinatione effugi,
Cic. Cat. 1, 6, 15:declinare dixit (Epicurus) atomum perpaulum, et ipsa declinatio ad libidinem fingitur, etc.,
id. Fin. 1, 6, 19; so of the oblique motion of atoms, id. Fat. 10, 22; 22, 47.—Like the Gr. klima, the supposed slope of the earth towards the poles, a region of the earth or sky, a climate:II.declinatio mundi,
Col. 1 prooem. § 22; so,mundi,
id. 3, 1, 3; cf.:positio caeli et declinatio,
id. 1, 6, 18;so correspond. with regio caeli,
Col. 4, 24, 2; cf.also caeli,
the altitude of the pole, Vitr. 9, 7, 1.—Trop.A.In gen., a turning away from any thing; an avoiding, avoidance: ut bona natura appetimus, sic a malis natura declinamus;B.quae declinatio, si cum ratione fiet, cautio appelletur,
Cic. Tusc. 4, 6, 13; cf.so opp. appetitio,
id. N. D. 3, 13, 33; and in plur. Gell. 14, 1, 23:laboris, periculi,
Cic. Clu. 53 fin. —t. t.1.Of rhetor. lang., a short digression:2.declinatio brevis a proposito, non ut superior illa digressio,
Cic. de Or. 3, 53 fin.; id. Part. 15; cf. Quint. 9, 1, 32 and 34.—Of gramm. lang.: variation, inflection.(α).In the older grammarians, every change of form which a word undergoes; as declension, strictly so called, conjugation, comparison, derivation, etc., Varr. L. L. 8, § 2 sq.; 10, § 11 sq.; Cic. de Or. 3, 54; cf.(β).also of declension in its stricter sense,
Quint. 1, 4, 29; 1, 5, 63;of conjugation,
id. 1, 4, 13;of derivation,
id. 8, 3, 32; 2, 15, 4.—Among the later grammarians, of declension, properly so called, as distinguished from conjugatio, comparatio, derivatio, etc. So, Donatus: in declinatione compositivorum nominum, p. 174 P. (p. 13 Lind.). -
7 vitatio
vītātĭo, ōnis, f. [vito], a shunning, avoiding, avoidance:doloris,
Cic. Fin. 5, 7, 20:oculorum, lucis, urbis, fori,
id. Phil. 3, 10, 24:periculi,
Auct. Her. 3, 2, 3.
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