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41 граничить с
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42 граничить со
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43 adjaceo
ad-jăcĕo, cŭi, no sup., 2, v. n., to lie at or near, to be contiguous to, to border upon (most freq. used of the geog. position of a place).—Constr. with dat., acc., ad, or absol. (in the histt. very freq.).—(α).With dat.:(β).Tuscus ager Romano adjacet,
Liv. 2, 49, 9;mari,
id. 26, 42, 4; Plin. 6, 17, 21, § 56; Front. Strat. 3, 9, 5:cum Romani adjacerent vallo,
Tac. A. 1, 65:munitionibus,
id. ib. 4, 48:adjacet undis moles,
Ov. M. 11, 729:quae adjacent torrenti Jeboc,
Vulg. Deut. 2, 37.— Trop.:velle adjacet mihi,
Vulg. Rom. 7, 18; 7, 21.—With acc.:(γ).gentes, quae mare illud adjacent,
Nep. Tim. 2, 1:Etruriam,
Liv. 7, 12, 6 (v. Alschefski and Weissenb. ad h. l.).—With ad:(δ).ad Syrtim,
Mel. 1, 7, 2; so perh. also Caes. B. G. 6, 33, 2: quae (regio) ad Aduatucos adjacet (for the lect. vulg. Aduatucos or Aduatucis), and id. B. C. 2, 1; v. adigo fin. —Absol.:adjacet (via) et mollior et magis trita,
Quint. 1, 6, 22:adjacente Tiberi,
Tac. H. 2, 93; so,adjacentes populi, i. q. propinqui,
contiguous, neighboring, Tac. A. 13, 55.—And adjăcentĭa, ium, n., the adjoining country:lacum in adjacentia erupturum,
Tac. A. 1, 79; 5, 14:projecto nitore adjacentia inlustrare,
Plin. 37, 9, 52, § 137. -
44 circumjacentia
(α). (β).With dat.:* II.Lycaonia et Phrygia circumjacent Europae,
Liv. 37, 54, 11:capiti et collo,
App. de Deo Socr. p. 54, 33.—Trop., in rhet.: circumjăcentĭa, ĭum, n., the context, Qumt. 9, 4, 29. -
45 circumjaceo
(α). (β).With dat.:* II.Lycaonia et Phrygia circumjacent Europae,
Liv. 37, 54, 11:capiti et collo,
App. de Deo Socr. p. 54, 33.—Trop., in rhet.: circumjăcentĭa, ĭum, n., the context, Qumt. 9, 4, 29. -
46 collimito
col-līmĭto ( conl-), āre, and collī-mĭtor, āri, to border upon (post-class. and very rare); with dat., Amm. 31, 2, 14; Sol. 25. -
47 collimitor
col-līmĭto ( conl-), āre, and collī-mĭtor, āri, to border upon (post-class. and very rare); with dat., Amm. 31, 2, 14; Sol. 25. -
48 compagino
compāgĭno, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a. [compago].I.To join together (late Lat.), Amm. 21, 2, 1; 28, 2, 3; Prud. steph. 10, 889; Aug. Conf. 13, 30 al.—II. -
49 conlimito
col-līmĭto ( conl-), āre, and collī-mĭtor, āri, to border upon (post-class. and very rare); with dat., Amm. 31, 2, 14; Sol. 25. -
50 contermino
contermĭno, āre, v. n. [conterminus]: alicui, to be a borderer, to border upon; perh. only Amm. 14, 2, 5; 23, 6, 45. -
51 continuo
1.contĭnŭō, adv., v. continuus fin. 2.2.contĭnŭo, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a. and n. [continuus].I.Act., to join together in uninterrupted succession, to make continuous.A.In space, to join one with another, to connect, unite (class. in prose and poetry; most freq. in pass.); constr. with the dat. or (more freq.) absol.(α).With dat.:(β).(aër) mari continuatus et junctus est,
Cic. N. D. 2, 45, 117:aedificia moenibus,
Liv. 1, 44, 4:regnum Alyattei Campis Mygdoniis,
Hor. C. 3, 16, 42:latus lateri,
Ov. A. A. 1, 496.—Medial: Suionibus Sitonum gentes continuantur,
border upon, are next to, Tac. G. 45 fin. —Absol.:B.binas aut amplius domos,
to erect in rows, Sall. C. 20, 11:fundos in agro Casinati optimos et fructuosissimos,
to buy, acquire contiguous plots of ground, Cic. Agr. 3, 4, 14 (v. the pass. in connection); cf.:latissime agrum,
id. ib. 2, 26, 70;and agros,
Liv. 34, 4, 9:pontem,
Tac. A. 15, 9:domus, quā Palatium et Maecenatis hortos continuaverat,
id. ib. 15, 39:verba,
to connect together in a period, Cic. de Or. 3, 37, 149; cf.:verba verbis aut nomina nominibus (just before: cadentia similiter jungere),
Quint. 9, 4, 43.—Medial:quae (atomi) cohaerescunt inter se et aliae alias adprehendentes continuantur,
hang together, Cic. N. D. 1, 20, 54.—Of time and objects relating to it, to join, connect together, to continue uninterruptedly, to do successively one thing after another:II.Cassius die ac nocte continuato itinere ad eum pervenit,
Caes. B. C. 3, 36; 3, 11:nuntius diem noctemque itinere continuato ingentem attulit terrorem,
Liv. 26, 9, 6:continens die ac nocte proelium,
id. 4, 22, 5; cf.:perpotationem biduo duabusque noctibus,
Plin. 14, 22, 28, § 145:diem noctemque potando,
Tac. G. 22; cf.:theatro dies totos,
id. A. 14, 20:magistratum,
Sall. J. 37, 2; cf. Liv. 38, 33, 1:praeturam ei,
i. e. to give it to him immediately after the ædileship, Vell. 2, 91, 3: dapes. Hor. S. 2, 6, 108:febrem,
Cels. 3, 5:prope funera,
Liv. 1, 46, 9:fatigatio continuati laboris,
Curt. 7, 11, 17:quae (libertas) usque ad hoc tempus honoribus, imperiis... continuata permansit,
Cic. Fl. 11, 25.— Poet.:aliquos ferro,
to slay one after another, Stat. Th. 9, 292; cf.:aliquos hastis,
id. ib. 12, 745. —In pass. with dat.:hiemi continuatur hiems,
Ov. P. 1, 2, 26; so,paci externae confestim discordia domi,
Liv. 2, 54, 2:damna damnis,
Tac. Agr. 41.—Neutr., to continue, last (rare):1.febres ita ut coepere continuant,
Cels. 3, 3; 2, 4; Plin. 17, 24, 37, § 233; 18, 35, 87, § 362; 20, 5, 17, § 35.— Hence, *contĭnŭanter, adv., continuously, in uninterrupted succession (opp. carptim), Aug. Retract. 1, 24.—2.contĭ-nŭātē, adv., in uninterrupted succession, one after another, Paul. ex Fest. p. 315, 5; Fest. p. 314, 32 Müll.; cf. Fronto, Diff. Verb. p. 2195 P. -
52 ὁμορέω
V 0-1-2-0-0=3 1 Chr 12,41; Jer 27(50),40; Ez 16,26to border upon [τινι] Jer 27(50),40οἱ ὁμοροῦντες αὐτοῖς their neighbours 1 Chr 12,41 Cf. HELBING 1928, 252 -
53 συνάπτω
V 10-24-4-2-16=56 Ex 26,6.9.10.11(bis)to join together Ex 26,10; id. [τι] Ex 26,11; to join sth to sth [τί τινι] Ex 26,6; id. [τι πρός τι] Ex 29,5to border upon [τινι] Jos 19,26; id. [ἐπί τι] Jos 17,10; to reach, to extend to [ἕως τινός] Sir 35,16; id. [τι]Is 15,8; to reach to, to touch Neh 3,19; to press closely on [τινι] 2 Sm 1,6to join (in battle), to attack [τινι] JgsB 20,20; id. [πρός τινα] JgsB 20,30; id. [τι] 1 Mc 15,14; to form (an alliance) [τι] 2 Kgs 10,34; to come together Is 16,8συνῆψαν αἱ παρεμβολαὶ εἰς πόλεμον the armies joined in battle 1 Mc 7,43; μὴ συνάψητε πρὸς αὐτοὺς πόλεμον do not engage in war against them Dt 2,5; συνῆψεν ὁ πόλεμος the battle was joined 1 Mc 9,47Cf. HELBING 1928, 305-306; LE BOULLUEC 1989, 268; WEVERS 1990, 417 -
54 ἐπιγειτνιάω
Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἐπιγειτνιάω
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55 ὁμορέω
A PLond ined.2850.26 (ii B.C.)), to be ὅμορος, border upon, march with,[οἱ Κελτοὶ] ὁμουρέουσι Κυνησίοισι Hdt.2.33
, cf. 7.123, Hecat.163, 204, 207 J., etc. ;χωρίοις ὁμορεῖν Plu. 2.292d
, etc.: abs., τὰ ὁμοροῦντα τοῦ ἀέρος adjacent portions.., Epicur. Ep.2p.51U. (but neighbours, Sent.40
) ;- οῦσα γῆ PAmh. 2.68.56
(i A. D.), cf. PLond.l.c.II cohabit, have intercourse with, ὅπως ἄλλοισιν ὁμουρέῃ, of a woman, Perict. ap. Stob.4.28.19. (Written with ρρ, ὁμορροῦντα SIG1044.16
(Halic., iv/iii B. C.).) -
56 шектесу
(бірдемемен) border (upon); ауысп. verge -
57 bɔ fuhye
to border upon--------to confine on each other -
58 bɔ hye
to border upon--------to confine on each other -
59 bɔ hyeban
to border upon--------to confine on each other -
60 da hyia
to border upon--------to confine with
См. также в других словарях:
border upon — See border on … New dictionary of synonyms
border upon — lie on the boundary of … English contemporary dictionary
border — [bôr′dər] n. [ME & OFr bordure < border, to border < Frank * bord, margin: see BOARD] 1. an edge or a part near an edge; margin; side 2. a dividing line between two countries, states, etc. or the land along it; frontier 3. a narrow strip,… … English World dictionary
border — I n. 1) to draw, establish, fix a border 2) to cross, slip across a border 3) to patrol a border 4) a closed; common; disputed; fixed; open; recognized; unguarded border 5) a border between 6) across, over a border (to smuggle goods across a… … Combinatory dictionary
border on — 1. Adjoin, be in contact with, be coterminous with, touch at the side or end of, be contiguous to, lie adjacent to, be in juxtaposition with, border upon. 2. Approach, come near to, approximate, almost reach, want but little of, border upon … New dictionary of synonyms
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border — I noun ambit, borderland, boundary, bounds, brim, brink, circumference, circumjacence, confine, contiguity, edge, edging, end, enframement, extremity, flange, frame, fringe, frontier, hem, ledge, limit, line of demarcation, marge, margin, outline … Law dictionary
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Border land — Border Bor der, n. [OE. bordure, F. bordure, fr. border to border, fr. bord a border; of German origin; cf. MHG. borte border, trimming, G. borte trimming, ribbon; akin to E. board in sense 8. See {Board}, n., and cf. {Bordure}.] 1. The outer… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Border — Bor der, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Bordered}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Bordering}.] 1. To touch at the edge or boundary; to be contiguous or adjacent; with on or upon as, Connecticut borders on Massachusetts. [1913 Webster] 2. To approach; to come near to; to … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
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