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1 plāgōsus
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2 corpus
corpus oris, n [1 CER-], a body (living or lifeless): solidum et suci plenum, T.: requies animi et corporis: ingenium sine corpore exercere, S.: corpus sine pectore, H.: Corporis exigui, of small frame, H.: dedit pro corpore nummos, to escape flogging, H.: adverso corpore, in front: corpore toto intorquet, with all his might, V.: gravi salubris corpori, i. e. stomach, H.: volgatum, prostituted, L.—Plur., for sing. (poet.): cruciata corpora demittite nocti, O.: Sanguine in corpora summa vocato, the skin, O.— Flesh: ossa subiecta corpori: corpus amisi: fecisti tantum corporis, Ph.: pars versa est in corporis usum, to serve as flesh, O.— A lifeless body, corpse, trunk: per eorum corpora transire, Cs.: occisorum, S.: corpore ambusto: ne corpus eiciatur. — Substance, matter, reality (poet.): Spem sine corpore amat, O.: metuit sine corpore nomen, O.—A person, individual: tuum corpus domumque custodire: delecta virum corpora, V.: excepto corpore Turni, V.: corpora vestra, coniugum, etc., i. e. you and your wives, L.: liberum corpus habere, retain civil rights, S.: defuncta corpora vitā heroum, shades, V.—Of animals: corpora magna boum, heads, V.: septem ingentia (cervorum), V. — A mass, body, frame, system, structure, community, corporation: corpus navium viminibus contextum, framework, Cs.: totum corpus coronā militum cingere, structure, Cs.: rei p.: civitatis, political body, L.: sui corporis creari regem, L.: Romani iuris, L.—A part, particle, grain: quot haberet corpora pulvis, O.* * *body; person, self; virility; flesh; corpse; trunk; frame(work); collection/sum; substantial/material/concrete object/body; particle/atom; corporation, guild -
3 plāga
plāga ae, f [PLAG-], a blow, stroke, stripe, cut, thrust, wound: merces plagae: (pueris) Dant animos plagae, V.: plagae et volnera, Ta.: plagae crescunt, Nisi prospicis, a flogging, T.: mortifera: inpulsio (atomorum), quam plagam appellat, shock. —Fig., a blow, stroke, injury, calamity, disaster, misfortune: accepisset res p. plagam: plaga iniecta petitioni tuae: sic nec orator plagam gravem facit, nisi, etc., makes a deep impression.* * *Ihunting net, web, trap; tract/region/quarter; expanse of country/sea; coverletIIstroke, blow, stripe, cut, thrust; wound/gash, injury; misfortune; impression -
4 scapulae
scapulae ārum, f dim. [1 SCAP-], the shoulder-blades, shoulders: altae, O.: scapulas perdidi, i. e. have incurred a flogging, T. -
5 (verber)
(verber) eris, n a lash, whip, scourge, rod (in sing. only gen. and abl.): illi instant verbere torto, V.: conscendit equos et ictu Verberis increpuit, O.: Verberibus caedere, T.: adulescentem nudari iubet verberaque adferri, L.: aurigae proni in verbera pendent, i. e. lean forward with the whip, V.—A thong, lash: torquens verbera fundae, V. —A lashing, scourging, flogging: Percutimur ca put conversae verbere virgae, O.: mitto verbera, mitto securīs: verberibus ac tormentis quaestionem habere: tergum foedum vestigiis verberum, L.—A stripe, stroke, blow: remorum in verbere perstant, O.: turgentis caudae, H.: placido dare verbera ponto, the strokes (of oars), O.—Fig., plur, lashes, strokes: contumeliarum verbera subire: patruae verbera linguae, i. e. chidings, H. -
6 catomun
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7 catomus
shoulders; (for flogging) -
8 despolio
despoliare, despoliavi, despoliatus V TRANSrob/plunder; despoil (of); strip, deprive of clothing/covering; (for flogging) -
9 despolior
despoliari, despoliatus sum V DEProb/plunder; despoil (of); strip, deprive of clothing/covering; (for flogging) -
10 dispolo
despolare, despolavi, despolatus V TRANSrob/plunder; despoil (of); strip, deprive of clothing/covering; (for flogging) -
11 vapulatio
flogging; threshing -
12 verber
lash, whip; blows (pl.), a beating, flogging -
13 verberantia
a flogging -
14 parasitus
părăsītus, i, m., = parasitos, lit. one who eats with another; hence,I.In gen., a guest (pure Lat. conviva): parasiti Jovis, the gods, Varr. ap. Aug. Civ. Dei, 6, 7; App. M. 10, p. 246, 35.—Hence, parasitus Phoebi, a player, actor, Mart. 9, 29, 9.—II.In partic., in a bad sense, one who, by flattery and buffoonery, manages to live at another's expense, a sponger, toad-eater, parasite (syn. scurra):nos parasiti planius... Quasi mures semper edimus alienum cibum, etc.,
Plaut. Capt. 1, 1, 7; cf. id. Pers. 1, 3, 3; id. Stich. 2, 1, 42:parasitorum in comoediis assentatio,
Cic. Lael. 26, 98:edaces parasiti,
Hor. Ep. 2, 1, 173; Juv. 1, 139. —Comically, of a whip: ne ulmos parasitos faciat, that he will make his elm-twigs stick to me like parasites, i. e. give me a sound flogging, Plaut. Ep. 2, 3, 5.—The tutelar deity of parasites was Hercules, Plaut. Curc. 2, 3, 79. -
15 plaga
1.plāga, ae, f. [cf. plango], = plêgê, a blow, stroke, wound, stripe (class.; syn.: ictus, verbera, vulnus).I.Lit.A.In gen., Cic. Verr. 2, 5, 51, § 134:B. 1.(pueris) dant animos plagae,
Verg. A. 7, 382; Ov. M. 12, 487; 13, 119; Gell. 5, 15, 7:plagae et vulnera,
Tac. G. 7.—Of the shock of atoms striking together, Cic. Fat. 20, 48; cf. id. ib. 10, 22.—Absol.:2.plagis costae callent,
Plaut. Ps. 1, 2, 4:quem irrigatum plagis pistori dabo,
refreshed by a flogging, id. Ep. 1, 2, 18:plagas pati,
Ter. Eun. 2, 2, 13:plagas perferre,
to bear, receive blows, Cic. Tusc. 2, 17, 41:plagam accipere,
id. Sest. 19, 44:plagam mortiferam infligere,
to inflict a mortal wound, id. Vatin. 8, 20:plaga mediocris pestifera,
id. Off. 1, 24, 84:verbera et plagas repraesentare,
stripes and blows, Suet. Vit. 10:plagis confectus,
Cic. Verr. 2, 5, 54, § 140:flagelli plaga livorem facit,
Vulg. Ecclus. 28, 21:plagam curare,
Cels. 5, 26, 24:suere,
id. 5, 26, 23.—With gen.:C.scorpionum et canum plagas sanare,
Plin. H. N. 23 prooem. 3, § 6.—Transf., a welt, scar, stripe:II.etiam de tergo ducentas plagas praegnatis dabo,
swollen welts, Plaut. As. 2, 2, 10.—Trop.A.A blow, stroke; an injury, misfortune (class.):B. C. D.illa plaga est injecta petitioni tuae maxima,
that great blow was given, that great obstacle was presented, Cic. Mur. 23, 48:sic nec oratio plagam gravem facit, nisi, etc.,
makes a deep impression, id. Or. 68, 228:levior est plaga ab amico, quam a debitore,
loss, injury, id. Fam. 9, 16, 7:hac ille perculsus plaga non succubuit,
blow, disaster, Nep. Eum. 5.—Slaughter, destruction (late Lat.):2.percussit eos plagā magnā,
Vulg. 1 Reg. 23, 5; id. 2 Reg. 17, 9.plăga, ae, f. [root plak- of Gr. plakous; cf. planca, plancus, plānus].A.A region, quarter, tract (mostly poet.; v. Madv. ad Cic. Fin. 2, 4, 12, where de plagis omnibus is the reading of the best MSS., but pagis of the edd.; but cf. Mütz. ad Curt. p. 516 sq.; and Krebs, Antibarb. p. 869;B. 3.syn.: regio, tractus, terra): aetheria,
the ethereal regions, the air, Verg. A. 1, 394: caeli scrutantur plagas, Poët. ap. Cic. Div. 2, 13, 30:et si quem extenta plagarum Quattuor in medio dirimit plaga solis iniqui,
zones, Verg. A. 7, 226:ardens,
the torrid zone, Sen. Herc. Oet. 67; also called fervida, id ib. 1219: septentrionalis, Plin. 16, 32, 59, § 136:ea plaga caeli,
Just. 42, 3, 2:ad orientis plagam,
Curt. 4, 37, 16:ad orientalem plagam,
on the east, in the eastern quarter, Vulg. Deut. 4, 41:contra orientalem plagam urbis, id. Josue, 4, 19: ad septentrionalem plagam collis,
side, id. Judic. 7, 1 et saep.—plăga, ae, f. [root plek-; Gr. plekô, weave, entwine; cf. plecto, plico, du-plex], a hunting-net, snare, gin (class.; syn.: retia, casses).A.Lit.:B.canes compellunt in plagas lupum,
Plaut. Poen. 3, 3, 35:tendere plagas,
Cic. Off. 3, 17, 68:extricata densis Cerva plagis,
Hor. C. 3, 5, 32; Ov. M. 7, 768:nodosae,
id. F. 6, 110:inque plagam nullo cervus agente cadit (al. plagas),
id. A. A. 3, 428:aut trudit... Apros in obstantes plagas,
Hor. Epod. 2, 32.—Of the spider's web:illa difficile cernuntur, atque ut in plagis liniae offensae praecipitant in sinum,
Plin. 11, 24, 28, § 82.— Sing. (very rare):sic tu... tabulam tamquam plagam ponas,
Cic. Off. 3, 17, 68.—Trop., a snare, trap, toil (class.;II.syn. pedica): se impedire in plagas,
Plaut. Mil. 4, 9, 11:se in plagas conicere,
id. Trin. 2, 1, 11:quas plagas ipsi contra se Stoici texuerunt,
Cic. Ac. 2, 48, 147:in illas tibi majores plagas incidendum est,
id. Verr. 2, 5, 58, § 151:Antonium conjeci in Caesaris Octaviani plagas,
id. Fam. 12, 25, 4:speculabor, ne quis nostro consilio venator assit cum auritis plagis, i. e. arrectis attentisque auribus,
Plaut. Mil. 3, 1, 14.— Sing. (rare) hanc ergo plagam effugi, Cic. Att. 7, 1, 5.—A bedcurtain, a curtain (ante-class.; v. plagula), Varr. ap. Non. 162, 28:eburneis lectis et plagis sigillatis,
id. ib. 378, 9:chlamydes, plagae, vela aurea,
id. ib. 537, 23. -
16 plagosus
plāgōsus, a, um, adj. [id.], full of blows.I. II. -
17 vapularis
vāpŭlāris, e, adj. [vapulo], that gets a flogging: tribunus, facetiously, qs. the head floggee, of a slave, Plaut. Pers. 1, 1, 22. -
18 vapulo
vāpŭlo, āvi, 1, v. neutral pass. [perh. root vap-; cf. vappo; prop. to wriggle, flutter; hence], to get a cudgelling or flogging, to be flogged.I.Lit.:2.ego vapulando, ille verberando usque ambo defessi sumus,
Ter. Ad. 2, 2, 5;so (opp. verberare),
Plaut. Am. 1, 1, 178:vapulo ego invitus,
id. Cas. 5, 3, 15: ergo istoc magis, Quia vaniloquus, vapulabis, [p. 1958] id. Am. 1, 1, 223:cum corpus vapulet,
Lucr. 4, 936:non ego, sed tenuis vapulat umbra mea,
Prop. 3, 3 (2, 12), 20:qui illum viderant ab illo flagris vapulantem,
Sen. Lud. Mort. Claud. 15, 2:testis in reum rogatus, an ab reo fustibus vapulasset,
Quint. 9, 2, 12; 1, 3, 16:saepe territus quasi vapulaturus,
Dig. 47, 10, 15:coctum ego, non vapulatum dudum conductus fui,
Plaut. Aul. 3, 3, 9.—Vapula, vapulet, as an opprobrious expression, you be flogged! he be flogged! like the vulg. Engl., you be hanged! he be hanged! nunc profecto vapula ob mendacium, Plaut. Am. 1, 1, 214; id. As. 2, 4, 72; id. Truc. 5, 53:B.vapulet! Ne sibi me credat supplicem fore!
id. Pers. 2, 3, 17:vapulare te vehementer jubeo,
id. Curc. 4, 4, 12.—Hence, prov.: vapula Papiria, of doubtful signif.; v. Fest. p. 372 Müll. —Transf.1.Of troops, like our to be beaten, i. e. to be conquered: septimam legionem vapulasse, Cael. ap. Cic. Fam. 8, 1, 4.—2.Of property, to be dissipated, squandered:3.vapulat peculium,
Plaut. Stich. 5, 5, 10:multa,
Sen. Q. N. 6, 7, 6.—In gen., of inanim. things, to be struck, beaten:II. B.(olea) quae vapulavit macescit,
Varr. R. R. 1, 55, 1:turris pluvio,
Sen. Agam. 93.— -
19 verber
verber, ĕris (nom., dat., and acc. sing. do not occur, and the sing. in gen. very rarely; Neue, Formenl. 1, p. 476), n., a lash, whip, scourge, rod (syn.: scutica, flagrum),I.Lit. (rare; perh. not in Cic., but cf. in II. B.).(α).Plur.: Tr. Quid me fiet nunc jam? Th. Verberibus caedere, lutum, pendens, Plaut. Most. 5, 2, 45:(β).verberibus caedere,
id. Pers. 2, 3, 17; Ter. And. 1, 2, 28:adulescentem nudari jubet verberaque adferri,
Liv. 8, 28, 4:verbera saetosa movebat arator,
Prop. 4 (5), 1, 25; Verg. A. 5, 147; Quint. Decl. 19, 3.—Sing.:II.illi instant verbere torto,
Verg. G. 3, 106:Phoebus equos stimuloque domans et verbere Saevit,
Ov. M. 2, 399:conscendit equos Gradivus et ictu Verberis increpuit,
id. ib. 14, 821:pecora verbere domantur,
Sen. Const. 12, 3;of a top: volitans sub verbere turbo,
Verg. A. 7, 378.—Transf.A.Concr., a thong of a sling and other similar missile weapons ( poet.;B. 1.syn. lorum),
Verg. G. 1, 309; Sil. 1, 314; Luc. 3, 469.—Lit.(α).Plur.:(β).dignus es verberibus multis,
Plaut. Mil. 2, 3, 71:tibi erunt parata verba, huic homini verbera,
Ter. Heaut. 2, 3, 115:mitto vincla, mitto carcerem, mitto verbera, mitto secures,
Cic. Verr. 2, 3, 24, § 59:aliquem vinculis ac verberibus atque omni supplicio excruciare,
id. Imp. Pomp. 5, 11; id. Phil. 11, 2, 5; id. Rep. 1, 38, 59; 2, 37, 62; id. Fin. 5, 20, 55; id. Tusc. 3, 27, 64; XII. Tab. ap. Cic. Leg. 3, 3, 6; Quint. 1, 3, 15; 4, 2, 113; 11, 1, 40; 11, 3, 90; 11, 3, 117; Hor. S. 1, 3, 121:cum positā stares ad verbera veste,
Ov. Am. 1, 6, 19:saeva,
id. ib. 1, 13, 18:tergum foedum vestigiis verberum,
Liv. 2, 23, 7:post verbere,
Stat. Th. 2, 143; 2, 172.—Sing.:b. (α).percutimur caput conversae verbere virgae,
Ov. M. 14, 300; Sen. Herc. Fur. 801.—Plur.:(β).turgentis caudae,
Hor. S. 2, 7, 49:ventorum,
Lucr. 5, 957; 6, 115:radiorum (solis),
id. 5, 485; 5, 1104:aquarum,
Claud. Laud. Stil. 1, 288.—Of the strokes of oars:puppis Verberibus senis agitur,
Luc. 3, 536; Sil. 11, 493; cf. Ov. H. 18, 23.—Sing.:2.remorum in verbere perstant,
Ov. M. 3, 662:trementes Verbere ripae,
Hor. C. 3, 27, 24:adverso siderum,
Plin. 2, 8, 6, § 33.—Trop., plur., lashes, strokes:contumeliarum verbera subire,
Cic. Rep. 1, 5, 9:verbera linguae,
i. e. chidings, Hor. C. 3, 12, 3 (cf.:verberari verbis, convicio, etc., under verbero): fortunae verbera,
the strokes of fate, Gell. 13, 27, 4. -
20 verberabundus
verbĕrābundus, a, um, adj. [id.], whipping, flogging, Plaut. Fragm. p. 30 Mai (id. Stich. v. 444 Ritschl).
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