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cōnfercio

  • 1 confercio

    confercio, fercire, fersi, fertum accumuler (en tassant), entasser, bourrer.
    * * *
    confercio, fercire, fersi, fertum accumuler (en tassant), entasser, bourrer.
    * * *
        Confercio, confercis, confersi, confertum, confercire. Varro. Entasser.

    Dictionarium latinogallicum > confercio

  • 2 confercio

    cōnfercio, fersī, fertum, īre (con u. farcio), zusammenstopfen, dicht zusammendrängen, myrrham in folles, Plin.: se, Varr.: confertae naves, Liv.: urbanos et agrestem c. in arta tecta, Liv. Vgl. confertus.

    lateinisch-deutsches > confercio

  • 3 confercio

    cōnfercio, fersī, fertum, īre (con u. farcio), zusammenstopfen, dicht zusammendrängen, myrrham in folles, Plin.: se, Varr.: confertae naves, Liv.: urbanos et agrestem c. in arta tecta, Liv. Vgl. confertus.

    Ausführliches Lateinisch-deutsches Handwörterbuch > confercio

  • 4 cōnferciō

        cōnferciō īre    [com- + farcio], see confertus.
    * * *
    confercire, confersi, confertus V TRANS
    stuff/cram/pack/press (close) together; fill densely; raise a shout in unison

    Latin-English dictionary > cōnferciō

  • 5 confercio

    confercio, fertus, 4, crowd or press together, L. 6:38.*

    English-Latin new dictionary > confercio

  • 6 confercio

    Латинско-русский словарь > confercio

  • 7 confercio

    con-fercĭo, no perf., fertum, 4, v. a. [farcio], to stuff or cram together, to press close together (in verb. finit. very rare; in part. perf. and P. a. class.).
    (α).
    Verb. finit.:

    ventus cum confercit, franguntur montes nimborum,

    Lucr. 6, 158:

    se (apes),

    Varr. R. R. 3, 16, 35:

    myrrham in follis,

    Plin. 12, 15, 35, § 68.—
    (β).
    Part. perf.:

    viā sibi inter confertas naves factā,

    Liv. 37, 11, 13:

    quo magis astu Confertos ita acervatim mors accumulabat,

    Lucr. 6, 1263; cf.:

    agrestem in arta tecta,

    Liv. 3, 6, 3.—Hence, confer-tus, a, um, P. a.; lit., pressed together; hence,
    A.
    Pressed close, crowded, thick, dense (opp. rarus): caeruleum spumat sale confertā rate pulsum, Enn. ap. Prisc. 5, p. 659 P. (Ann. v. 379 Vahl.):

    tune inane quicquam putes esse, cum ita completa et conferta sint omnia, ut, etc.,

    Cic. Ac. 2, 40, 125:

    plures simul conferti,

    Liv. 29, 34, 12: in confertā multitudine, * Suet. Tib. 2:

    agmen,

    Verg. G. 3, 369 (conjunctum, Serv.):

    moles,

    Tac. A. 4, 62.—Esp.,
    2.
    In milit. lang., of the close, compact order of battle:

    ut numquam conferti, sed rari magnisque intervallis proeliarentur,

    Caes. B. G. 5, 16: acies, Auct. B. Afr. 13; Liv. 10, 29, 6; 42, 59, 5; Tac. A. 6, 35; 14, 36; Verg. A. 2, 347.— Comp., Liv. 9, 27, 9.— Sup., Caes. B. G. 1, 24; 2, 23:

    hostes,

    Sall. C. 60, 7:

    turba,

    Liv. 2, 12, 6; Sall. J. 98, 1:

    turmatim et quam maxume confertis equis Mauros invadunt,

    id. ib. 101, 4:

    conferto gradu inrupere,

    Tac. A. 12, 35.—
    B.
    With abl., stuffed, filled full, full:

    ingenti turbā conferta deorum templa,

    Liv. 45, 2, 7.— Trop.:

    otiosa vita, plena et conferta voluptatibus,

    Cic. Sest. 10, 23; so id. Tusc. 3, 19, 44; id. Fin. 2, 20, 64:

    cibo,

    id. Cat. 2, 5, 10; * Quint. 5, 14, 27:

    legio conferta maniplis,

    Sil. 7, 390.—
    * Adv.: confertē, in acc. with A. 2. (for the more usual confertim, q. v.), in a compact body; only comp.:

    confertius resistentes,

    Amm. 24, 7, 7.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > confercio

  • 8 confercio

    , confersi, confertum, confercire 4
      туго набивать, сбивать в кучу

    Dictionary Latin-Russian new > confercio

  • 9 confertus

    confertus, a, um part. passé de confercio. [st2]1 [-] entassé, serré, dru. [st2]2 [-] plein de, bourré de, rempli de.    - conferti milites: les soldats en rangs serrés.    - confertus aliqua re: plein de qqch, bourré de qqch.    - confertus cibo: gorgé de nourriture.
    * * *
    confertus, a, um part. passé de confercio. [st2]1 [-] entassé, serré, dru. [st2]2 [-] plein de, bourré de, rempli de.    - conferti milites: les soldats en rangs serrés.    - confertus aliqua re: plein de qqch, bourré de qqch.    - confertus cibo: gorgé de nourriture.
    * * *
        Confertus, Participium. Caesar. Entassé et enserré ensemble.
    \
        Liber confertus voluptatibus. Cic. Tout plein, Tout farci.
    \
        Conferta vita voluptatum omnium varietate. Cic. Toute pleine, Remplie et farcie.
    \
        Confertus cibo. Cic. Bien saoul, Plein jusques à la gorge.
    \
        Confertior, confertissimus Liu. Plus entassé et serré.

    Dictionarium latinogallicum > confertus

  • 10 confersi

    Латинско-русский словарь > confersi

  • 11 confertim

    cōnfertim [ confercio ]
    сжато, густо, тесно, сомкнутыми рядами (pugnare L; se recipere Sl)

    Латинско-русский словарь > confertim

  • 12 confertus

    1. cōnfertus, a, um
    part. pf. к confercio
    2. adj.
    плотный, густой ( turba L); сомкнутый (agmen V, Sen; milites Cs); переполненный, перегруженный, набитый ( voluptatibus C)

    Латинско-русский словарь > confertus

  • 13 confertus

    cōnfertus, a, um, PAdi. m. Compar. u. Superl. (confercio), zusammengestopft, d.i. a) absol. = dicht zusammengedrängt, in dichter Masse, dicht (Ggstz. rarus), c. ratis (Schiff), Enn. fr.: c. naves, Liv.: concreti confertique pili, zusammengeballte, Cels. – mensura bona et c., gedrückt volles, Vulg.: confertissima turba, Liv. - bes. als milit. t. t. = in geschlossenen Gliedern (Ggstz. rarus, s. Fabri Liv. 21, 8, 9), agmen confertum, Verg. u. Sen., confertissimum, Caes.: acies conferta, Auct. b. Afr., confertissima, Caes.: conferti milites, Caes.: confertissimi hostes, Sall.: cum Galli structis ante se scutis conferti starent, Liv.: quod confertiores steterant (Ggstz. raris ordinibus constiterant), Liv.: numquam conferti, sed rari magnisque intervallis proeliantur, Caes.: rari in confertos illati, Liv. – b) m. Abl. = vollgestopft, gestopft voll von etw., v. Örtl., ingenti turbā non virorum modo sed etiam feminarum conferta totā urbe deorum immortalium templa, Liv.: Nysa lucis confertissima, Stat. – übtr., otiosa vita, plena et conferta voluptatibus, Cic.: liber c. voluptatibus, Cic.

    lateinisch-deutsches > confertus

  • 14 confertus

    cōnfertus, a, um, PAdi. m. Compar. u. Superl. (confercio), zusammengestopft, d.i. a) absol. = dicht zusammengedrängt, in dichter Masse, dicht (Ggstz. rarus), c. ratis (Schiff), Enn. fr.: c. naves, Liv.: concreti confertique pili, zusammengeballte, Cels. – mensura bona et c., gedrückt volles, Vulg.: confertissima turba, Liv. - bes. als milit. t. t. = in geschlossenen Gliedern (Ggstz. rarus, s. Fabri Liv. 21, 8, 9), agmen confertum, Verg. u. Sen., confertissimum, Caes.: acies conferta, Auct. b. Afr., confertissima, Caes.: conferti milites, Caes.: confertissimi hostes, Sall.: cum Galli structis ante se scutis conferti starent, Liv.: quod confertiores steterant (Ggstz. raris ordinibus constiterant), Liv.: numquam conferti, sed rari magnisque intervallis proeliantur, Caes.: rari in confertos illati, Liv. – b) m. Abl. = vollgestopft, gestopft voll von etw., v. Örtl., ingenti turbā non virorum modo sed etiam feminarum conferta totā urbe deorum immortalium templa, Liv.: Nysa lucis confertissima, Stat. – übtr., otiosa vita, plena et conferta voluptatibus, Cic.: liber c. voluptatibus, Cic.

    Ausführliches Lateinisch-deutsches Handwörterbuch > confertus

  • 15 cōnfertus

        cōnfertus adj. with comp. and sup.    [P. of confercio], pressed close, crowded, thick, dense: cum ita conferta sint omnia, ut, etc.: plures simul, L.: agmen, V.—Close, compact, in close array: ut conferti proeliarentur, Cs.: via inter confertas navīs, L.: confertos in proelia audere, V.: confertiores steterunt, L.: confertissima acies, Cs.: quam maxume equi, S.—Stuffed, filled full, full: turbā templa, L.: cibo: vita voluptatibus.
    * * *
    conferta -um, confertior -or -us, confertissimus -a -um ADJ
    crowded/pressed together/thronging; in close order (troops); dense/compact; full (of), crammed (with), abounding (in) (w/ABL); as a whole, summarized

    Latin-English dictionary > cōnfertus

  • 16 conferte

    confertē, adv., v. confercio, P. a. fin.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > conferte

  • 17 confertus

    confertus, a, um, Part. and P. a., from confercio, q. v.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > confertus

  • 18 E

    E, e, indecl. n. or (sc. littera) fem., a vowel corresponding to both the e and the ê of the Greeks, Ter. Maur. p. 2386 P.; Aus. Idyll. de Litter. Monos. 3 and 4; Mart. Cap. 3, § 235. Its sound varied; short e being sounded sometimes like Engl. e in men (so in pater, inter, etc.), sometimes more nearly like short i, as in Engl. pin (so in famelia, mereto, Menerva, etc.); whence, in the literary language, it passed, in a large class of words, into ĭ (familia, merito, etc.), though retained in the popular speech, and oft. in inscriptions. Long e also varied in sound, often resembling the diphthong ae, with which it is constantly confounded in MSS. and inscrr. (cf. raeda and reda; saeculum and seculum; ceteri and caeteri, etc.), and often approaching the sound of ī (v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 324 sqq.). The short e in Latin is the least emphatic of all the vowels; hence, it not only took the place of other vowels in changes of words where the sounds became weakened, and in the vulgar language where the vowel sounds were less sharply distinguished, but frequently took the place of a final syllable ending in a consonant, and was sometimes, especially at the end of words, rejected.
    b.
    The transition of ă into ĕ (which took place especially before two consonants, whereas usually ă passed into ĭ in open syllables, v. art. A.) is seen in the compounds refello, commendo, ineptus, confercio, incestus, perpetior, etc. In some words the orthography is unsettled, as in the compounds of spargo, which are written sometimes aspergo, conspergo, dispergo, etc., and sometimes aspargo, conspargo, dispargo, etc.; as along with dispando the vulgar form dispenno also occurs. So in all the verbal reduplications, as cĕcidi, cĕcini, pĕperi, pĕpigi, tĕtigi; pĕperci, fĕfelli; dĕdi and stĕti (from cado, cano, pario, pango, tango, parco, fallo, DA and STA), whereas the vowels i, o, u remain unchanged in reduplication (bĭbi; mŏmordi; tŭtudi; for the anomalous forms in Gell. 7, 9, are certainly Graecized). As along with pĕpĭgi there also arose by syncope (in the Lat. lang. a predominating element in the formation of words) the perfect pēgi; so we may explain the perfect forms cēpi, fēci, jēci, frēgi, and ēgi, as syncopated from cĕcĭpi, fĕfĭci, jĕjĭci, frĕfĭgi, and ĕïgi (this last analogously with dēgo, from dēĭgo).
    c.
    For i stands ĕ
    (α).
    in the neuter forms of the adjectives in is (acre, agreste, facile, etc.).—
    (β).
    In the nominative forms: aedes, apes, canes, etc. (for aedis, apis, canis, etc. v. h. vv.).—
    (γ).
    In the dative forms: morte, jure dicundo, Dijove, Victore, etc. (cf. Neue, Formenl. 1, 192 sq.; and Quint. 1, 4, 17). —
    (δ).
    In the nominatives in es, whose genitive has ĭtis.—
    (ε).
    In the nominatives from stems ending in c, b, p, t, n, etc., as, pollex, caelebs, princeps, comes, flumen, from pollic-, caelib-, princip-, comit-, flumin-; and
    (ζ).
    In the old and partly vulgar manner of writing and pronouncing: CEPET, EXEMET, NAVEBOS (Colum. Rostr.), FVET, DEDET, TEMPESTATEBVS, TIBE (Epit. of the Scipios), COMPROMESISE (S. C. de Bacch.), MENERVA, MAGESTER, HERE, VEA, VELLA, etc. (Quint. 1, 4, 8, and 17; Varr. R. R. 1, 2, 14; cf. Cic. de Or. 3, 12, 46). In the earliest period (before Plautus) ĕ was found in many words in which ĭ afterwards took its place; as: semul, fuet, mereto, tempestatebus, etc.—
    (η).
    It is prob. too that the abl. ĕ of the third declension proceeded from ī (or id); cf. Neue, Formenl. 1, 239 sqq.; Corss. Ausspr. 2, 241 sq.
    d.
    It less freq. happens that o and u pass over into ĕ, as vello, ocellus, verto, vertex, vester, compared with vulsi, oculus, vorto, vortex, voster: generis from genus, societas from socius, etc.; and even for long u we have ĕ in dejĕro and pejĕro, from jūro.
    e.
    The stem vowel o is weakened to ĕ in the vocative of nouns in us of the second declension; ĕ also represents o in the perf. and in pass. forms, such as scripsere, conabare, conabere, from scripserunt, conabaris, conaberis; in the future forms attinge, dice, facie, recipie, from attingam, dicam, faciam, recipiam (see under dico init.); in the forms mage, pote, from magis, potis, etc.; it is inserted for euphony in the nom. of many nouns and adjj whose stems end in r preceded by a mute, as ager, aper, liber, aeger, ruber, sacer, etc.
    f.
    The vowel e is suppressed in the imperatives dic, duc, fac, fer, in the anteclass infinitive biber (from bibere); in the vocative of the second declension of nouns in ius, as Gai, geni, fili, canteri, columbari, mantuari, volturi, mi (cf. Freund in Jahn's Neue Jahrbüch, 1835, vol. 13, p. 148 sq.), in enclitic particles often, as: hic, haec, hoc, for hice, etc.; so, illaec, sic, nunc, nec, ac, etc.: viden, potin: quin, for quine, etc., and as an initial in the present forms of the verb esse (sum, sumus, sunt; sim, etc., for esum, esumus, esunt, esim, etc.). But the forms facul, simul, Bacchanal, etc., are not apocopated. Even a radical ĕ sometimes drops out when a prefix or suffix is taken; so, gigno, for gigeno: malignus, for maligenus: gnatus, for genatus.
    g.
    The long e interchanges most freq. with the diphthongs ae and oe (q. v.); yet it sometimes also took the place of ā, as in anhēlo, from hālo, and in the rustic bēlo, for bālo; and likewise of ī, as LEBER, SPECA, AMECVS, for līber, spīca, amīcus (Quint. Inst. l. l.; Varr. R. R. 1, 48, 2; Paul. ex Fest. p. 15, 6 Müll.); and in words borrowed from the Greek, as chorēa, Darēus, along with Academīa, Alexandrīa; see the letter I.
    h.
    As an abbreviation, E (mostly in connection with other abbreviations) signifies egregius, equus, eques, erexit, evocatus, etc.; e. g. E. M. V. = egregiae memoriae vir; E. Q. R. = eques Romanus; EE. QQ. RR. = equites Romani; E. P. = equo publico; E. M. D. S. P. E. = e monitu de sua pecunia erexit, etc.
    2.
    e.. praep., out of, from, v. ex.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > E

  • 19 e

    E, e, indecl. n. or (sc. littera) fem., a vowel corresponding to both the e and the ê of the Greeks, Ter. Maur. p. 2386 P.; Aus. Idyll. de Litter. Monos. 3 and 4; Mart. Cap. 3, § 235. Its sound varied; short e being sounded sometimes like Engl. e in men (so in pater, inter, etc.), sometimes more nearly like short i, as in Engl. pin (so in famelia, mereto, Menerva, etc.); whence, in the literary language, it passed, in a large class of words, into ĭ (familia, merito, etc.), though retained in the popular speech, and oft. in inscriptions. Long e also varied in sound, often resembling the diphthong ae, with which it is constantly confounded in MSS. and inscrr. (cf. raeda and reda; saeculum and seculum; ceteri and caeteri, etc.), and often approaching the sound of ī (v. Corss. Ausspr. 1, 324 sqq.). The short e in Latin is the least emphatic of all the vowels; hence, it not only took the place of other vowels in changes of words where the sounds became weakened, and in the vulgar language where the vowel sounds were less sharply distinguished, but frequently took the place of a final syllable ending in a consonant, and was sometimes, especially at the end of words, rejected.
    b.
    The transition of ă into ĕ (which took place especially before two consonants, whereas usually ă passed into ĭ in open syllables, v. art. A.) is seen in the compounds refello, commendo, ineptus, confercio, incestus, perpetior, etc. In some words the orthography is unsettled, as in the compounds of spargo, which are written sometimes aspergo, conspergo, dispergo, etc., and sometimes aspargo, conspargo, dispargo, etc.; as along with dispando the vulgar form dispenno also occurs. So in all the verbal reduplications, as cĕcidi, cĕcini, pĕperi, pĕpigi, tĕtigi; pĕperci, fĕfelli; dĕdi and stĕti (from cado, cano, pario, pango, tango, parco, fallo, DA and STA), whereas the vowels i, o, u remain unchanged in reduplication (bĭbi; mŏmordi; tŭtudi; for the anomalous forms in Gell. 7, 9, are certainly Graecized). As along with pĕpĭgi there also arose by syncope (in the Lat. lang. a predominating element in the formation of words) the perfect pēgi; so we may explain the perfect forms cēpi, fēci, jēci, frēgi, and ēgi, as syncopated from cĕcĭpi, fĕfĭci, jĕjĭci, frĕfĭgi, and ĕïgi (this last analogously with dēgo, from dēĭgo).
    c.
    For i stands ĕ
    (α).
    in the neuter forms of the adjectives in is (acre, agreste, facile, etc.).—
    (β).
    In the nominative forms: aedes, apes, canes, etc. (for aedis, apis, canis, etc. v. h. vv.).—
    (γ).
    In the dative forms: morte, jure dicundo, Dijove, Victore, etc. (cf. Neue, Formenl. 1, 192 sq.; and Quint. 1, 4, 17). —
    (δ).
    In the nominatives in es, whose genitive has ĭtis.—
    (ε).
    In the nominatives from stems ending in c, b, p, t, n, etc., as, pollex, caelebs, princeps, comes, flumen, from pollic-, caelib-, princip-, comit-, flumin-; and
    (ζ).
    In the old and partly vulgar manner of writing and pronouncing: CEPET, EXEMET, NAVEBOS (Colum. Rostr.), FVET, DEDET, TEMPESTATEBVS, TIBE (Epit. of the Scipios), COMPROMESISE (S. C. de Bacch.), MENERVA, MAGESTER, HERE, VEA, VELLA, etc. (Quint. 1, 4, 8, and 17; Varr. R. R. 1, 2, 14; cf. Cic. de Or. 3, 12, 46). In the earliest period (before Plautus) ĕ was found in many words in which ĭ afterwards took its place; as: semul, fuet, mereto, tempestatebus, etc.—
    (η).
    It is prob. too that the abl. ĕ of the third declension proceeded from ī (or id); cf. Neue, Formenl. 1, 239 sqq.; Corss. Ausspr. 2, 241 sq.
    d.
    It less freq. happens that o and u pass over into ĕ, as vello, ocellus, verto, vertex, vester, compared with vulsi, oculus, vorto, vortex, voster: generis from genus, societas from socius, etc.; and even for long u we have ĕ in dejĕro and pejĕro, from jūro.
    e.
    The stem vowel o is weakened to ĕ in the vocative of nouns in us of the second declension; ĕ also represents o in the perf. and in pass. forms, such as scripsere, conabare, conabere, from scripserunt, conabaris, conaberis; in the future forms attinge, dice, facie, recipie, from attingam, dicam, faciam, recipiam (see under dico init.); in the forms mage, pote, from magis, potis, etc.; it is inserted for euphony in the nom. of many nouns and adjj whose stems end in r preceded by a mute, as ager, aper, liber, aeger, ruber, sacer, etc.
    f.
    The vowel e is suppressed in the imperatives dic, duc, fac, fer, in the anteclass infinitive biber (from bibere); in the vocative of the second declension of nouns in ius, as Gai, geni, fili, canteri, columbari, mantuari, volturi, mi (cf. Freund in Jahn's Neue Jahrbüch, 1835, vol. 13, p. 148 sq.), in enclitic particles often, as: hic, haec, hoc, for hice, etc.; so, illaec, sic, nunc, nec, ac, etc.: viden, potin: quin, for quine, etc., and as an initial in the present forms of the verb esse (sum, sumus, sunt; sim, etc., for esum, esumus, esunt, esim, etc.). But the forms facul, simul, Bacchanal, etc., are not apocopated. Even a radical ĕ sometimes drops out when a prefix or suffix is taken; so, gigno, for gigeno: malignus, for maligenus: gnatus, for genatus.
    g.
    The long e interchanges most freq. with the diphthongs ae and oe (q. v.); yet it sometimes also took the place of ā, as in anhēlo, from hālo, and in the rustic bēlo, for bālo; and likewise of ī, as LEBER, SPECA, AMECVS, for līber, spīca, amīcus (Quint. Inst. l. l.; Varr. R. R. 1, 48, 2; Paul. ex Fest. p. 15, 6 Müll.); and in words borrowed from the Greek, as chorēa, Darēus, along with Academīa, Alexandrīa; see the letter I.
    h.
    As an abbreviation, E (mostly in connection with other abbreviations) signifies egregius, equus, eques, erexit, evocatus, etc.; e. g. E. M. V. = egregiae memoriae vir; E. Q. R. = eques Romanus; EE. QQ. RR. = equites Romani; E. P. = equo publico; E. M. D. S. P. E. = e monitu de sua pecunia erexit, etc.
    2.
    e.. praep., out of, from, v. ex.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > e

  • 20 CRAM TOGETHER

    [V]
    COMPILO (-ARE -PILAVI -PILATUM)
    CONPILO (-ARE -PILAVI -PILATUM)
    CONFERCIO (-IRE -FERSI -FERTUM)
    CONFARCIO (-IRE -FARSI -FARTUM)

    English-Latin dictionary > CRAM TOGETHER

См. также в других словарях:

  • confertus — Arranged closely together; coalescing. [L. confercio, pp. fertus, to cram together, fr. farcio, to fill full, cram] * * * con·fer·tus (kən furґtəs) [L.] close together; confluent …   Medical dictionary

  • conferta —   , confertum, confertus   L. confercio, cram together.   1) Plants forming a dense covering on the forest floor. Bromus confertus   2) inflorescence branches densely crowded. Deyeuxia conferta, Eragrostis conferta, Imperata conferta, Milium… …   Etymological dictionary of grasses

  • confertiflora —   , confertiflorus   L. confercio, cram together; flos, flower. Inflorescence branches densely congested …   Etymological dictionary of grasses

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