-
1 commendātīcius
commendātīcius (not -tītius), adj. [commen do], commendatory: litterae, letters of recommen dation, an introduction: tabellae.* * *Icommendataria, commendatarium ADJcontaining a recommendation/introduction (letters); commendatory (L+S)IIcommendaticia, commendaticium ADJcontaining a recommendation/introduction (letters); commendatory (L+S) -
2 dēnārius
dēnārius ( gen plur. -iūm; rarely -iōrum), adj. [deni], containing ten each ; hence, worth ten (asses): nummus, a silver coin, originally of ten, afterwards of sixteen asses (about 8 d., $0.16): pendere denarios nummos quadringenos, L.—As subst. (sc. nummus): denarii trecenti: ad denarios L in singulos modios annona pervenerat, Cs.: ad denarium solvere, to pay in silver: spes denarii, of money.* * *Idenaria, denarium ADJcontaining/related to the number ten; worth a denarius (Roman silver coin)IIdenarius (silver coin=10/16/18 asses); (denarius aureus=25 silver denarius); drachma weight -
3 septēnārius
septēnārius adj. [septeni], containing seven, consisting of seven.—Plur. m. as subst. (sc. versūs), verses of seven feet each.* * *septenaria, septenarium ADJ -
4 venēnifer
venēnifer fera, ferum, adj. [venenum+1 FER-], containing poison, venomous: palatum, O.* * *venenifera, veneniferum ADJvenomous; containing poison -
5 carbunculosus
carbunculosa, carbunculosum ADJcontaining tophus (variety of sandstone); containing red toph-stone (L+S) -
6 ditonus
Iditone, interval containing two whole tones; major thirdIImajor third; (containing two notes/tones) -
7 cadus
cădus, i ( gen. plur. cadūm, v. II. infra), m., = kados [Slav. kad, kadĭ; Serv. kada; Magyar, kád; Rouman. Kadŭ].I.Lit., a large vessel for containing liquids, esp. wine; a bottle, jar, jug; mostly of earthen-ware, but sometimes of stone, Plin. 36, 22, 43, § 158; or even of metal, Verg. A. 6, 228.A.A wine-jar, wine-flask:B.cadi = vasa, quibus vina conduntur,
Non. p. 544, 11:cadus erat vini: inde implevi hirneam,
Plaut. Am. 1, 1, 273; so id. As. 3, 3, 34; id. Aul. 3, 6, 35; id. Mil. 3, 2, 36; 3, 2, 37; id. Poen. 1, 2, 47; id. Stich. 3, 1, 24:cadum capite sistere,
to upset, id. Mil. 3, 2, 36:vertere,
id. Stich. 5, 4, 39; 5, 4, 1:vina bonus quae deinde cadis onerarat Acestes,
Verg. A. 1, 195:fragiles,
Ov. M. 12, 243.—Hence poet., wine:Chius,
Tib. 2, 1, 28; Hor. C. 3, 19, 5:nec Parce cadis tibi destinatis,
id. ib. 2, 7, 20; 3, 14, 18.—For other uses:II.for containing honey,
Mart. 1, 56, 10;oil,
id. 1, 44, 8;hence, olearii,
oil-jars, Plin. 18, 30, 73, § 307;for fruits,
id. ib.;figs,
id. 15, 19, 21, § 82;aloes,
id. 27, 4, 5, § 14; cf. id. 16, 8, 13, § 34.—As a money-pot, Mart. 6, 27, 6; also = urna, a funeral urn:aënus,
Verg. A. 6, 228 Heyne.—Transf., a measure for liquids (in this sense, gen. plur. cadum, Lucil. and Varr. ap. Non. p. 544, 13 and 16; Plin. 14, 14, 17, § 96); syn. with amphora Attica (usu. = 1 1/2 amphorae, or 3 urnae, or 4 1/2 modii, or 12 congii, or 72 sextarii), Rhemn. Fann. Ponder. 84; Plin. 14, 15, 17, § 96 sq.; Isid. Orig. 16, 26, 13. -
8 miliarensis
mīlĭārensis ( millĭārensis), e, adj. [mille], that contains a thousand (post-class.): porticus, either containing a thousand columns, or containing a thousand paces, Vop. Aur. 49: COHORS, Inscr. Marin. Frat. Arv. p. 630. -
9 vesicula
vēsīcŭla, ae, f. dim. [id.], a little blister, vesicle; containing air, Lucr. 6, 130;containing seeds, on plants,
Cic. Div. 2, 14, 33. -
10 adipātus
adipātus adj. [adeps], fat, greasy. — Plur. neut. as subst, pastry prepared with fat: livida, Iu.—Of discourse, coarse, gross: dictio.* * *adipata, adipatum ADJrich; containing fat, fatty, greasy; coarse, gross (L+S) -
11 bilībris
bilībris e, adj. [bilibra], of two pounds; hence, cornu, holding two pints, H.* * *bilibris, bilibre ADJtwo-pound, weighing/containing two pounds; (2 Roman pounds = one and a half US) -
12 capāx
capāx ācis, adj. with comp. and sup. [CAP-], containing much, wide, large, spacious, roomy, capacious: conchae, H.: capaciores scyphos, H.: pharetra, O.: urbs, O.: circus capax populi, O.: animal mentis capacius, O.: cibi vinique capacissimus, L. —Fig., susceptible, capable of, good, able, apt, fit for: avidae et capaces (aures): ingenium, great, O.: animi ad praecepta, O.: imperii, Ta.* * *capacis (gen.), capacior -or -us, capacissimus -a -um ADJlarge, spacious, roomy, big; capable, fit, competent; has right to inherit -
13 cārus
cārus adj. with comp. and sup, dear, precious, valued, esteemed, beloved: meo cordi cario, T.: dis carus ipsis, H.: apud exercitum, Cs.: cariores Sabinas viris fecit, L.: parentes: perfugae minume cari, least valued, S.: care pater, V.: pignora nati, O.: frater carissimus: habet me se ipso cariorem: nihil apud animum carius, S.: corpus meo mihi carius, O.: ei cariora omnia quam decus, S.: si nobis vivere cari (volumus), to each other (sc. inter nos), H. — Precious, dear, costly, of a high price: amor, T.: annona in macello carior: nidor, H.: harenae, containing gold, O.: frumentum: (agrum) carissimis pretiis emere, very high.* * *cara -um, carior -or -us, carissimus -a -um ADJdear, beloved; costly, precious, valued; high-priced, expensive -
14 cum
cum (with pers. pron., and with unemphatic relat. pron., - cum enclit.; in compounds, com-), praep. with abl. [for *scom; SEC-], with, together with, in the company of, in connection with, along with, together, and: cum veteribus copiis sese coniungere, Cs.: antea cum uxore, tum sine eā: si cenas mecum, in my house, H.: errare cum Platone: cum lacte errorem suxisse: qui unum magistratum cum ipsis habeant, Cs.: foedera quibus etiam cum hoste devincitur fides: sentire cum rege, on the side of, L.: volentibus cum magnis dis: vivitur cum iis: cum quibus amicitias iunxerant, L.: ut te di cum tuo incepto perduint, T.: oratio habenda cum multitudine: ita cum Caesare egit, Cs.: agere cum civibus: quid mihi cum istā diligentiā?: tempus cum coniuratis consultando absumunt, L.: quibuscum belium gerunt, Cs.: cum Volscis aequo Marte discessum est, L.: cum coniuge distractus: cum Catone dissentire: hanc rationem dicendi cum imperatoris laude comparare: voluptatem cum cupiditate deliberare, against. —Of time, at, with, at the same time with, at the time of: cum primā luce domum venisse: pariter cum occasu solis, S.: cum sole reliquit, V.: exit cum nuntio Crassus, Cs.—With abl. of circumstance, manner, etc., with, in, under, in the midst of, among, to, at: cum ratione insanire, T.: cum dis bene iuvantibus arma capite (i. e. dis adiuvantibus), L.: cum summā rei p. salute: magno cum periculo provinciae, Cs.: magno cum gemitu civitatis: speculatus omnia cum curā, L: illud cum pace agemus, peacefully: bonā cum veniā audiatis: cui sunt inauditae cum Deiotaro querelae tuae? the remonstrances you made: servare fidem cum hoste, the faith pledged to.—Esp., after idem: tibi mecum in eodem est pistrino vivendum (i. e. in quo vivo): in eisdem flagitiis mecum versatus. —In the phrase, cum eo, with the circumstance, under the condition: sit sane, sed tamen cum eo, credo, quod sine peccato meo fiat: colonia missa cum eo, ut Antiatibus permitteretur, si, etc., L.— With primis, with the foremost, eminently, especially: homo cum primis locuples.—With an ordinal number, of increase, - fold: age<*> efficit cum octavo, cum decimo, eightfold.—Praegn., with, possessing, holding, wearing, owning: haud magnā cum re, Enn. ap. C.: iuvenes cum equis albis, upon: consul cum volnere gravi, L.: cum tunicä pullā sedere: vidi Cupidinem cum lampade, holding: cum eisdem suis vitiis nobilissimus, with all his faults.—In compounds com- was unchanged before b, p, m, and in comes and its derivatives; m was usu. assimilated before r, sometimes before l, but was usu. dropped before n; before other consonants m became n, but conicio was written for coniicio. Before a vowel (or h) m was dropped.* * *Iwhen, at the time/on each occasion/in the situation that; after; since/although; as soon; while, as (well as); whereas, in that, seeing that; on/during whichIIwith, together/jointly/along/simultaneous with, amid; supporting; attached; under command/at the head of; having/containing/including; using/by means of -
15 īgnifer
-
16 īnfitiālis
īnfitiālis e, adj. [infitiae], negative, consisting in denial: quaestio.* * *infitialis, infitiale ADJnegative, negatory; containing a denial -
17 iūgerum
iūgerum ī, n gen plur. iūgerūm; dat. and abl. iūgeribus, n [IV-], an acre, juger (containing 28,000 square feet): decumanum: quaterna in singulos iugera, Cs.: nescio quotenorum iugerum: per tota novem iugera Porrigitur, V.: immetata quibus iugera Fruges ferunt, i. e. lands, H.: novem Iugeribus distentus, O. -
18 legiō
legiō ōnis, f [1 LEG-], a body of soldiers, legion (containing 10 cohorts of foot-soldiers and 300 cavalry, in all between 4200 and 6000 men. These were Roman citizens; only on pressing necessity were slaves admitted. The legions were numbered in the order of their levy, but were often known by particular names): cum legione secundā ac tertiā, L.: Martia.— Plur, legions, soldiers: Bruttiae Lucanaeque legiones, L.— An army, large body of troops: Cetera dum legio moratur, V.: de colle videri poterat legio, V.* * *legion; army -
19 modius
modius ī, m [modus], a corn-measure, measure, peck (containing sixteen sextarii, or one sixth of a Greek medimnus): tritici: pro singulis modiis octonos HS dare: modium populo dare asse: pleno modio, in full measure: ventres modio castigat iniquo, with short measure, Iu.: (anulorum) super tris modios, pecks, L.: argenti, a peck of money, Iu.— Prov.: multos modios salis simul edendos esse, ut amicitiae munus expletum sit.* * *peck; Roman dry measure; (about 2 gallons/8000 cc) -
20 odōrifer
odōrifer era, erum, adj. [odor+1 FER-], spreading odor, fragrant: panacea, V.: gens, i. e. Persae, O.* * *odorifera, odoriferum ADJfragrant, sweet smelling; producing/containing spices/perfumes (places/people)
См. также в других словарях:
containing — index comprehensive, inclusive, limiting Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
Containing — Contain Con*tain , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Contained}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Containing}.] [OE. contenen, conteinen, F. contenir, fr. L. continere, tentum; con + tenere to hold. See {Tenable}, and cf. {Countenance}.] 1. To hold within fixed limits; to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
containing a penalty — index penal Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
containing a pledge — index promissory Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
containing an assurance — index promissory Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
containing error — index erroneous Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
containing power — index capacity (maximum) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
containing stipulations — index conditional Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
containing — con·tain || kÉ™n teɪn v. include, have within; restrain, keep under control … English contemporary dictionary
containing — A technical term of the law of customs duties, meaning that the imported article contains a significant quantity of the named material. 19 USC § 1202, headnote 9(f) … Ballentine's law dictionary
containing — present part of contain … Useful english dictionary