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1 dens
dens, dentis ( gen. plur. usually dentium, but dentum is approved by Varr. L. L. 7, 38, 67), m. [root in Sanscr. dantas, Gr. odous, Goth. tunthus, Germ. Zahn, and Engl. tooth; cf. edo, Engl. eat], a tooth.I.Prop.: cui auro dentes juncti escunt, XII. Tab. 10, 9; Plin. 11, 37, 61, § 160 sq.; Cels. 8, 1; Cic. N. D. 2, 54; Isid. 11, 1, 52:2.primores,
the front teeth, Plin. 7, 16, 15, § 68;also called adversi acuti,
Cic. N. D. 2, 54:praecisores,
Isid. 11, 1, 52;and in beasts: rapaces,
Veg. Vet. 6, 1, 1:canini,
the canine teeth, eye-teeth, Varr. R. R. 2, 7, 3; Cels. 8, 1; Plin. 11, 37, 61, § 160;in horses: columellares,
Varr. R. R. 2, 7, 2; Plin. 11, 37, 61, § 160:maxillares,
the jaw-teeth, grinders, Cels. 8, 1; called also genuini, Cic. l. l.;and molares, Isid. l. l. et saep.: dentes scalpere,
Plin. 30, 4, 9, § 27:fricare,
id. ib.:scariphare,
id. 28, 11, 49, § 179; cf. id. 30, 3, 8, § 21:mobiles confirmare,
id. 28, 11, 49, § 178; cf.:mobiles stabilire,
id. 32, 7, 26, § 80:eximere,
to extract, Cels. 6, 9; so,evellere,
Plin. 30, 3, 8, § 25:extrahere,
id. 32, 7, 26, § 79:excutere,
Juv. 16, 10 et saep.:dens Indus,
i. e. the elephant's, Ov. M. 8, 288; hence for ivory, id. ib. 11, 167;also called dens Libycus,
Prop. 2, 31, 12 (3, 29, 12 M.):Numida,
Ov. P. 4, 9, 28;and Erythraeus,
Mart. 13, 100.—Prov.a.Albis dentibus deridere aliquem, i. e. to laugh heartily at a person (so as to show one's teeth), Plaut. Ep. 3, 3, 48.—b.Venire sub dentem, to fall into the jaws, under the clutches of, Petr. 58, 6.—c.Dentem pro dente, tooth for tooth, Vulg. Matt. 5, 38.—B.Meton. of things resembling a tooth, a tooth, point, spike, prong, tine, fluke, etc.:II.aratri,
Col. 2, 4, 6; Verg. G. 2, 423 al.; cf. Varr. L. L. 5, § 135 Müll.: (irpicis) acc. to id. ib.:pectinis,
id. ib.; Tib. 1, 9, 68: (clavi) id. 1, 2, 18:serrae,
Plin. 16, 43, 83, § 227; Vitr. 1, 5; cf. Ov. M. 8, 246, and 6, 58;hence, in architecture, the walls indentated like the teeth of a saw, which connected the two main walls,
Vitr. 6, 11:forcipis,
id. 10, 2: (ancorae) Verg. A. 6, 3;for falx (vinitorum),
the pruning-hook, id. G. 2, 406 et saep.—Trop., the tooth of envy, envy, ill-will:B.more hominum invident, in conviviis rodunt, in circulis vellicant: non illo inimico sed hoc maledico dente carpunt,
Cic. Balb. 26:invidus,
Hor. Od. 4, 3, 16:ater,
id. Epod. 6, 15.—Of a destroying power:leti sub dentibus ipsis,
Lucr. 1, 852; cf.of time: vitiataque dentibus aevi consumere omnia,
Ov. M. 15, 235;and of water: aqua dentes habet,
Petr. 42;of malice: malignitatis dentes vitare,
Val. Max. 4, 7, extr. 2. -
2 dēns
dēns dentis, m [ED-], a tooth: dentibus in ore constructis: eorum adversi acuti... intimi, qui genuini vocantur, the front teeth... grinders: puer, nondum omni dente renato, Iu.: dentīs exacuit sus, tusks, V.: viperei, O.: eburnei, elephants': Indi, the elephant's, O.: gemmae et dentes Indi, ivory, O.: Libycus, ivory, Pr.— A tooth, point, spike, prong, tine, fluke: aratri, V.: perpetui (serrae), O.: insecti pectine dentes (i. e. insectus dentibus pecten), O.: tenax (ancorae), V.: curvus Saturni, the pruning-hook, V.—Fig., a tooth: maligno dente carpunt, of hatred: invidus, H.: ater, H.: Theoninus, i. e. slanderous tongue, H.: tangere singula dente superbo, aristocratic daintiness, H.: dentes aevi, O.* * *tooth; tusk; ivory; tooth-like thing, spike; distructive power, envy, ill will -
3 dens
m.dens, tooth. -
4 dens
1) его́, её ( о неодушевлённых предметах и животных)2) того́, той; э́того, э́той* * *her, its, possessive* * *pron its;( om dyr ofte) his, her. -
5 dens
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6 dens
adj dense -
7 dens
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8 dens
(dentis) tooth. -
9 dens
its -
10 dens
its [possessive determiner] -
11 dens sapientia
m. s.&pl.dens serotinus, dens sapientia. -
12 dens serotinus
m. s.&pl.dens serotinus, dens sapientia. -
13 dens acutus
m. s.&pl.dens acutus. -
14 dens deciduus
m. s.&pl.dens deciduus. -
15 atirimɔdensɛm
nounwickedness -
16 зубовидный отросток
Русско-английский биологический словарь > зубовидный отросток
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17 логова
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18 зуб
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19 density
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20 dense
См. также в других словарях:
Dens — (lateinisch für Zahn oder Zacken) bezeichnet: Dens (Nentershausen), einen Ortsteil der Gemeinde Nentershausen in Osthessen Dens axis (kurz: Dens), einen dornförmigen knöchernen Fortsatz des zweiten Halswirbels; siehe Axis (Halswirbel) Dens… … Deutsch Wikipedia
dens — DENS, Ă, denşi, se, adj. (Despre corpuri, substanţe, soluţii) Cu densitate mare; cu părţile componente strâns unite; compact, des. – Din fr. dense, lat. densus. Trimis de RACAI, 13.09.2007. Sursa: DEX 98 Dens ≠ rar Trimis de siveco, 26.08.2006 … Dicționar Român
Dens — [auch: dɛns ], der; , Dentes [ dɛnte:s] [lat. dens (Gen.: dentis)] (Med.): Zahn. * * * Dẹns [lateinisch] der, / Dentes, der Zahn, Zähne. * * * Dens, der; , Dentes [ dɛnte:s; lat. dens (Gen.: dentis)] (Med.): Zahn … Universal-Lexikon
Dens — may refer to: Den (disambiguation) Dens (anatomy), also known as odontoid process or odontoid peg Tooth This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link led you here, yo … Wikipedia
dens — 1. estructura o apófisis dental o en forma de diente. El término se modifica a veces para identificar a un diente particular, como dens caninus. 2. apófisis odontoides de forma cónica del axis … Diccionario médico
DENS — quevasi edens dictus est. Sunt autem Dentes, minime extra curam a Vett. habiti: Hinc ridet Maximinam Mart. l. 2. Epigr. 41. quod eos haberet sordidos, nigrosqueve, Et tres sunt tibi Maximina dentes. Sed plane piceiqueve buxeiqueve. Et Horat. l. i … Hofmann J. Lexicon universale
Dens — der; , D’entes [...te:s] <aus gleichbed. lat. dens, Gen. dentis> Zahn (Med.) … Das große Fremdwörterbuch
dens-1 — dens 1 English meaning: talent, force of mind; to learn Deutsche Übersetzung: “hohe Geisteskraft, weiser Ratschluß”; verbal: “lehren, lernen” Material: densos n.: O.Ind. dáṁsas n. “powerful wonder, wise feat” = Av. daŋhah “… … Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary
dens-2 — dens 2 English meaning: dense Deutsche Übersetzung: “dicht” Material: Gk. δασύς “dense” : Lat. dēnsus ds.; the direct derivation from *dn̥sus does not contradict the explanation of *δάω from *dn̥sō (see above under dens 1); indeed … Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary
Dens — (lat.), 1) Zahn; 2) (Anat.), der zahnförmige Fortsatz … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Dens — (lat.), der Zahn; auch zahnartiger Fortsatz an Knochen … Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon