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1 nucleus
I.Lit.A.A nut; applied also to fruits resembling a nut:B.nucleus amygdalae,
Plin. 15, 13, 12, § 42:avellanae,
id. 37, 4, 15, § 56:pinearum nucum,
id. 15, 10, 9, § 35; cf.pineus,
Cels. 2, 22.—Prov.: e nuce nuculeum qui esse vult, frangit nucem, he who would eat the kernel of a nut breaks the nut, i. e. he who desires an advantage should not shun the labor of earning it, Plaut. Curc. 1, 1, 55:nuculeum amisi, retinui pigneri putamina,
I have lost the kernel and kept the shell, id. Capt. 3, 4, 122.—The hard, uneatable kernel, the stone of fruits:II.nuculei olivarum,
Plin. 37, 11, 73, § 188:persicorum,
id. 23, 7, 67, § 132:cerasorum,
id. 23, 7, 72, § 141:lignosus nucleus,
id. 13, 19, 34, § 112:acini,
id. 23, 1, 9, § 13.—Transf.A.The kernel, the inner part, inside of a thing:B.nucleus gallae,
Plin. 24, 4, 5, § 10:myrrhae,
id. 12, 16, 35, § 70:allii,
id. 19, 6, 34, § 111:conchae,
pearls, id. 9, 35, 55, § 111.—The kernel, i. e. the hardest, firmest, most solid part of a thing:pinguitudinis (terrae),
Plin. 17, 6, 4, § 42:ferri,
id. 34, 14, 41, § 144; 36, 25, 62, § 187:insuper ex testā nucleus inducatur,
Vitr. 7, 1. -
2 nuculeus
I.Lit.A.A nut; applied also to fruits resembling a nut:B.nucleus amygdalae,
Plin. 15, 13, 12, § 42:avellanae,
id. 37, 4, 15, § 56:pinearum nucum,
id. 15, 10, 9, § 35; cf.pineus,
Cels. 2, 22.—Prov.: e nuce nuculeum qui esse vult, frangit nucem, he who would eat the kernel of a nut breaks the nut, i. e. he who desires an advantage should not shun the labor of earning it, Plaut. Curc. 1, 1, 55:nuculeum amisi, retinui pigneri putamina,
I have lost the kernel and kept the shell, id. Capt. 3, 4, 122.—The hard, uneatable kernel, the stone of fruits:II.nuculei olivarum,
Plin. 37, 11, 73, § 188:persicorum,
id. 23, 7, 67, § 132:cerasorum,
id. 23, 7, 72, § 141:lignosus nucleus,
id. 13, 19, 34, § 112:acini,
id. 23, 1, 9, § 13.—Transf.A.The kernel, the inner part, inside of a thing:B.nucleus gallae,
Plin. 24, 4, 5, § 10:myrrhae,
id. 12, 16, 35, § 70:allii,
id. 19, 6, 34, § 111:conchae,
pearls, id. 9, 35, 55, § 111.—The kernel, i. e. the hardest, firmest, most solid part of a thing:pinguitudinis (terrae),
Plin. 17, 6, 4, § 42:ferri,
id. 34, 14, 41, § 144; 36, 25, 62, § 187:insuper ex testā nucleus inducatur,
Vitr. 7, 1. -
3 balanus
balanus ī, f, βάλανοσ (prop. an acorn; hence), a fragrant nut, ben-nut, H.* * *acorn; other nuts, chestnut, ben-nut; date; balsam; shell-fish; suppository -
4 nux
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5 nucleus
nucleus, inside of a nut, kernel; nut; central part; hard round mass/nodule -
6 balanus
bălănus, i, f. and rarely m. ( masc., [p. 220] Plin. 13, 4, 9, § 48; 15, 23, 25, § 93; Metell. ap. Macr. S. 2, 9; cf. Rudd. I. p. 31), = balanos.I.Lit., an acorn:II.glans,
Plin. 16, 6, 8, § 21; 17, 20, 34, § 151; 13, 4, 9, § 42.—Transf.A.Any fruit of similar form.1.A kind of large chestnut, Plin. 15, 23, 25, § 93.—2.The Phœnician and Cilician date, Plin. 13, 4, 9, § 48.—3.A nut yielding a balsam; the Arabian behen- or ben-nut:B.Hyperanthera semidecandra, Vahl. (called myrobalanus,
Plin. 12, 21, 46, § 100; 22, 20, 23, § 49):pressa tuis balanus capillis,
Hor. C. 3, 29, 4.—Also for the tree itself, Plin. 13, 9, 17, § 61.—In gen., any object in the form of an acorn.1.Medic. t., a suppository, Plin. 20, 5, 20, § 43; 24, 6, 21, § 31; 26, 8, 34, § 54; Cael. Aur. Acut. 2, 12.—2.A shell-fish, a species cf sea-mussel, Col. 8, 16, 7; Plin. 32, 11, 53, § 145; Plaut. Rud. 2, 1, 8; Metell. ap. Macr. S. 2, 9. -
7 nucipersicum
nŭcĭpersĭcum, i, n. [nux-persicum], a peach grafted on a nut-tree, a nut-peach:persica, nucipersica,
Mart. 13, 46 in lemm. -
8 nuciprunum
nŭcĭprūnum, i, n. [nux-prunus], a plum grafted on a nut-tree, a nut-plum, Plin. 15, 13, 12, § 41. -
9 nux
nux, nŭcis ( gen. plur. nucerum for nucum, Cael. ap. Charis. p. 40 P.), f. [etym. dub.], a nut. At weddings it was customary to strew nuts on the floor:II.sparge, marite, nuces,
Verg. E. 8, 30; cf. Varr. ap. Serv. ad E. 8, 30; Paul. ex Fest. p. 173 Müll.; Plin. 15, 22, 24, § 86; Mart. 5, 135. Nutshells were used in coloring the hair:viridi cortice tincta nucis,
Tib. 1, 8, 44. Nuts were strewn at the festival of Ceres, Sinn. Capito ap. Paul. ex Fest. p. 177 Müll. Children played with nuts, Suet. Aug. 83; Cat. 61, 131;hence, prov.: nuces relinquere,
to give up childish sports, to betake one's self to the serious business of life, to throw away our rattles, Pers. 1, 10: nux cassa, a nutshell:tene amatorem esse inventum inanem quasi cassam nucem,
Plaut. Ps. 1, 3, 137.—Fig. of a thing of no value, Hor. S. 2, 5, 36 ( = res vel vilissima); cf.:non ego tuam empsim vitam vitiosā nuce,
Plaut. Mil. 2, 3, 45.—Transf.A.A fruit with a hard shell or rind:B.nux amara,
a bitter almond, Cels. 3, 10; so Col. 7, 13; Plin. 15, 7, 7, § 26:castaneae nuces,
chestnuts, Verg. E. 2, 52:nux pinea,
Macr. S. 2, 6, 1; the fruit of the tithymalus, Plin. 26, 8, 40, § 66.—A nut-tree:inter primas germinant ulmus, salix, nuces,
Plin. 16, 25, 41, § 97; Liv. 24, 10; Juv. 11, 119.— Poet., an almond-tree, Verg. G. 1, 187. -
10 amygdalum
amygdalum ī, n, ἀμύγδαλον, an almond, almond kernel, O.* * *amygdalum amarum -- bitter almond; amygdalum dulce -- sweet almond
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11 breviter
breviter adv. with comp. and sup. [1 brevis], shortly; hence, of style, briefly, in brief, in few words, concisely, summarily: multa breviter dicta: rem breviter cognoscite: respondere: disserere, S.: adfari, V.: brevius dicere (opp. pluribus verbis): omnia Pacuvio breviter dabit ( in a few words), Iu.: agam quam brevissume potero.—Of pronunciation: ‘in’ breviter dicitur, is pronounced short.* * *brevitius, brevitissime ADVshortly, briefly, in a nut shell; quickly; for/within a short distance/time -
12 cassus
cassus adj. [1 CAR-], empty, void, hollow. nux, a nut-shell, H.: canna, hollow, O.: sanguine, bloodless: lumine, i. e. dead, V.: luminis ensis.— Fig., vain, empty, useless, futile, fruitless: quiddam: vota, V.: fertilitas terrae, O.: in cassum preces mittere, vainly, L.* * *Icassa, cassum ADJhollow/empty/devoid of, lacking; useless/fruitless/vainIIfall, overthrow; chance/fortune; accident, emergency, calamity, plight; fate -
13 ēnucleō
ēnucleō —, —, āre [ex + nucleus]. — Fig., to lay open, explain in detail: haec nunc: argumenta.* * *enucleare, enucleavi, enucleatus V TRANStake out the kernel/nut, shell; explain in detail -
14 galla
galla ae, f a gall-apple, gall-nut (an excrescence on the oak, caused by insects), V. -
15 glāns
glāns glandis, f [GAL-], an acorn, nut: glande vesci: quae deciderant Iovis arbore glandes, O.: querna, Ta.— An acorn-shaped ball, missile: ex argillā glandes iacere, Cs.: glande pugnare, S.: glande configebantur, L.: glandes plumbi, V.* * *acorn; beachnut; bullet thrown from a sling -
16 lāmina or lammina or lāmna
lāmina or lammina or lāmna ae, f a thin slice, plate, leaf, layer, lamina: cum lamina esset inventa: tigna laminis clavisque religant, Cs.: aenea, L.: Laminae ardentes, red-hot plates (for torture): candens, H.—A blade: argutae lamina serrae, V.: Lamina dissiluit, the blade of the sword, O.—Money, coin: argenti, O.: fulva, a gold piece, O.: inimicus lamnae, foe to money, H.—The tender shell of an unripe nut, O. -
17 ōs
ōs ōris (no gen plur.), n the mouth: ad haec omnia percipienda os est aptissimum: tenerum pueri, H.: os loquentis Opprimere, O.: e foliis natos Ore legunt (apes), V.: Gallica Temperat ora frenis, i. e. controls the horses, H.: nidum sibi construit ore, beak, O.: hostilia Ora canum, jaws, O.— Prov.: equi frenato est auris in ore, H.—The organ of speech, mouth, tongue, lips: in orest omni populo, in everybody's mouth, T.: istius nequitiam in ore volgi esse versatam: Postumius in ore erat, was the common talk, L.: consolatio, quam semper in ore habere debemus, to talk of constantly: poscebatur ore volgi dux Agricola, unanimously, Ta.: uno ore dicere, with one consent, T.: Uno ore auctores fuere, ut, etc., unanimously advised, T.: volito vivus per ora virūm, become famous, Enn. ap. C.: in ora hominum pro ludibrio abire, become a by-word of mockery, L.: quasi pleniore ore laudare, with more zest.—The face, countenance, look, expression, features: figura oris, T.: in ore sunt omnia, i. e. everything depends on the expression: concedas hinc aliquo ab ore eorum aliquantisper, leave them alone, T.: ad tribunum ora convertunt, looks, Cs.: agnoscunt ora parentum, V.: ales cristati cantibus oris, O.: coram in os te laudare, to your face, T.: nulli laedere os, insult to his face, T.: qui hodie usque os praebui, exposed myself to insult, T.: ut esset posteris ante os documentum, etc.: ante ora coniugum omnia pati, L.: Ora corticibus horrenda cavatis, masks, V.—As expressing boldness or modesty, the face, cheek, front, brow<*> os durum! brazen cheek! T.: os durissimum, very bold front: quo redibo ore ad eam, with what face? T.: quo ore ostendi posse? etc., L.: in testimonio nihil praeter vocem et os praestare.—Boldness, effrontery, impudence: quod tandem os est eius patroni, qui, etc.: nostis os hominis.—A voice, speech, expression: ora sono discordia signant, V.: ruit profundo Pindarus ore, H.: falsi ambages oris, O.— A mouth, opening, entrance, aperture, orifice, front: ante os ipsum portūs, L.: ingentem lato dedit ore <*>enestram, V.: os atque aditus portūs: Tiberis, L.: per ora novem, etc., sources, V.: ora navium Rostrata, beaks, H.—Fig., a mouth: ex tot<*>us belli ore ac faucibus.* * *Imouth, speech, expression; face; pronunciationIIbone; (implement, gnawed, dead); kernel (nut); heartwood (tree); stone (fruit)IIIbones (pl.); (dead people) -
18 os
os ossis, gen plur. ossium, n a bone.— Sing: devoratum, Ph.: ferrum ex osse revolsum est, O.: duro sudem vix osse revulsit, O.— Plur: cur hunc dolorem cineri eius atque ossibus inussisti?: ossa legere (after burning a corpse), V.: condere, bury, V.—The marrow, inmost part: exarsit iuveni <*>dolor ossibus ingens, in his bones, V.: per ima cu<*>currit Ossa tremor, V.: tremis ossa pavore, H.— Fig., in plur, the bones, outlines: imitari nec ossa solum, sed etiam sanguinem.* * *Imouth, speech, expression; face; pronunciationIIbone; (implement, gnawed, dead); kernel (nut); heartwood (tree); stone (fruit)IIIbones (pl.); (dead people) -
19 abellana
filbert, hazel nut -
20 abellanus
abellana, abellanum ADJfilbert/hazel (w/nut); of Abella (town in Campania noted for fruit/filberts)
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