-
21 pluviālis
pluviālis e, adj. [pluvia], of rain, rainy: Auster, rain-bringing, V.: sidus, O.: fungi, produced by rain, O.* * *pluvialis, pluviale ADJrain bringing, rainy -
22 prō-veniō
prō-veniō vēnī, ventus, īre, to come forth, appear, arise, be produced: proveniebant oratores novi, Naev. ap. C.: provenere ibi scriptorum magna ingenia, S.: Lana, O.: provenere dominationes, Ta.—To grow up, grow, thrive, flourish, prosper: frumentum angustius provenerat, Cs.: tantum frumenti provenerat, ut, etc., L.: Carmina proveniunt animo deducta sereno, succeed, O.: si cuncta provenissent, Ta. -
23 re-sonō
re-sonō āvī, —, āre, to sound again, resound, ring, re-echo: in vocibus... quiddam resonat urbanius: theatrum naturā ita resonans, ut, etc.: Umbrae cum resonarent triste, H.: resonabat Telorum custos (i. e. pharetra), O.: ut solent pleni resonare camini, roar, O.: undique magno domus strepitu, H.: spectacula plausu, O.: resonant avibus virgulta canoris, V.: testudo septem nervis, H.: qui (cornus) ad nervos resonant in cantibus: Suave locus voci resonat conclusus, echoes to the voice, H.: gloria virtuti resonat tamquam imago, answers like an echo.—To cause to resound: lucos cantu, V.: (sonus) in fidibus testudine resonatur, an echo is produced.—To repeat, re-echo, resound with: Litoraque alcyonen resonant, V.: Formosam resonare doces Amaryllida silvas, V. -
24 rubeus
rubeus adj. [rubus], of the bramble-bush: virga, a bramble-twig, V.* * *Irubea, rubeum ADJred (esp. of oxen/domestic animals); red (type of wheat, other contexts)IIrubea, rubeum ADJbramble-, of or produced from bramble -
25 Syriacus
-
26 veniō
veniō (imperf. venībat, T.; P. praes. gen. plur. venientūm, V.), vēnī, ventus, īre [BA-], to come: imus, venimus, Videmus, T.: ut veni ad urbem, etc.: cum venerat ad se, home: Delum Athenis venimus: Italiam fato profugus, Laviniaque venit Litora, V.: novus exercitus domo accitus Etruscis venit, for the Etruscans, L.: Non nos Libycos populare penatīs Venimus, V.: in conspe<*>tum, Cs.: dum tibi litterae meae veniant, reaches you: hereditas unicuique nostrum venit, falls: Lilybaeum venitur, i. e. the parties meet at Lilybaeum: ad me ventum est, ut, etc., it has devolved upon me: (Galli) veniri ad se confestim existimantes, that they would be attacked, Cs.: ventum in insulam est: ubi eo ventum est, on arriving there, Cs. —Fig., to come: contra rem suam me nescio quando venisse questus est, appeared: contra amici summam existimationem, i. e. to strike at: si quid in mentem veniet: tempus victoriae, Cs.: non sumus omnino sine curā venientis anni, for the coming year: veniens in aevom, H.: veniens aetas, the future, O.: cum matronarum ac virginum veniebat in mentem, when I thought of.— With in (rarely ad) and acc. of a condition or relation, to come into, fall into, enter: venisse Germanis (Ambiorigem) in amicitiam, to have obtained the alliance of, Cs.: in calamitatem: in proverbi consuetudinem: ut non solum hostibus in contemptionem Sabinus veniret, sed, etc., had fallen into contempt, Cs.: sese in eius fidem ac potestatem venire, i. e. surrender at discretion, Cs.: in sermonem venisse nemini, i. e. has talked with: veni in eum sermonem, ut dicerem, etc., happened to say: summam in spem per Helvetios regni obtinendi venire, to indulge a confident hope, Cs.: prope secessionem res venit, almost reached the point, L.: ad ultimum dimicationis rati rem venturam, L.: Cum speramus eo rem venturam, ut, etc., H.: saepe in eum locum ventum est, ut, etc., to such a point that, Cs.: ad tuam veniam condicionem, will accept: ad summum fortunae, to attain, H.—With ad, of a topic in speaking, to come to, reach, turn to: a fabulis ad facta: ad recentiores litteras.—To come, spring, arise, be produced, grow, descend: Hic segetes, illic veniunt felicius uvae, i. e. grow, V.: arbores sponte suā, V.—To come, result, occur, happen: in ceteris rebus cum venit calamitas: quod (extremum) cum venit (i. e. mors): si quando similis fortuna venisset, L.* * *venire, veni, ventus V -
27 veniō
veniō (imperf. venībat, T.; P. praes. gen. plur. venientūm, V.), vēnī, ventus, īre [BA-], to come: imus, venimus, Videmus, T.: ut veni ad urbem, etc.: cum venerat ad se, home: Delum Athenis venimus: Italiam fato profugus, Laviniaque venit Litora, V.: novus exercitus domo accitus Etruscis venit, for the Etruscans, L.: Non nos Libycos populare penatīs Venimus, V.: in conspe<*>tum, Cs.: dum tibi litterae meae veniant, reaches you: hereditas unicuique nostrum venit, falls: Lilybaeum venitur, i. e. the parties meet at Lilybaeum: ad me ventum est, ut, etc., it has devolved upon me: (Galli) veniri ad se confestim existimantes, that they would be attacked, Cs.: ventum in insulam est: ubi eo ventum est, on arriving there, Cs. —Fig., to come: contra rem suam me nescio quando venisse questus est, appeared: contra amici summam existimationem, i. e. to strike at: si quid in mentem veniet: tempus victoriae, Cs.: non sumus omnino sine curā venientis anni, for the coming year: veniens in aevom, H.: veniens aetas, the future, O.: cum matronarum ac virginum veniebat in mentem, when I thought of.— With in (rarely ad) and acc. of a condition or relation, to come into, fall into, enter: venisse Germanis (Ambiorigem) in amicitiam, to have obtained the alliance of, Cs.: in calamitatem: in proverbi consuetudinem: ut non solum hostibus in contemptionem Sabinus veniret, sed, etc., had fallen into contempt, Cs.: sese in eius fidem ac potestatem venire, i. e. surrender at discretion, Cs.: in sermonem venisse nemini, i. e. has talked with: veni in eum sermonem, ut dicerem, etc., happened to say: summam in spem per Helvetios regni obtinendi venire, to indulge a confident hope, Cs.: prope secessionem res venit, almost reached the point, L.: ad ultimum dimicationis rati rem venturam, L.: Cum speramus eo rem venturam, ut, etc., H.: saepe in eum locum ventum est, ut, etc., to such a point that, Cs.: ad tuam veniam condicionem, will accept: ad summum fortunae, to attain, H.—With ad, of a topic in speaking, to come to, reach, turn to: a fabulis ad facta: ad recentiores litteras.—To come, spring, arise, be produced, grow, descend: Hic segetes, illic veniunt felicius uvae, i. e. grow, V.: arbores sponte suā, V.—To come, result, occur, happen: in ceteris rebus cum venit calamitas: quod (extremum) cum venit (i. e. mors): si quando similis fortuna venisset, L.* * *venire, veni, ventus V -
28 vīsum
vīsum ī, n [P n. of video], a thing seen, sight, appearance, vision: visa somniorum: Dic visa quid ista ferant, O.—In the Academica of Cicero, for fantasi/a, an image produced by a sensation, representation.* * *vision; that which is seen, appearance, sight; visual/mental image -
29 adulteratus
adulterata, adulteratum ADJmixed, adulterated; produced by crossbreeding; of mixed decent/origin -
30 aerius
aeria, aerium ADJof/produced in/existing in/flying in air, airborne/aerial; towering, airy; blue -
31 arbustivus
arbustiva, arbustivum ADJof/with trees/orchards; of vines trained on trees/wines produced from them -
32 asininus
asinina, asininum ADJass's, of/produced by/foaled of an ass; ass-like; stupid; asinine -
33 bugenes
(gen.), bugenstis ADJborn of/produced from an ox/bull; (as insects from a dead carcass) -
34 catacecaumenites
-
35 cauter
branding iron; wound produced by burning, brand -
36 cauteroma
brand, mark produced by a hot iron -
37 cautroma
brand, mark produced by a hot iron -
38 chordus
chorda, chordum ADJlate-born/produced out of/late in season; second (crop of hay), aftermath -
39 collaticius
collaticia, collaticium ADJcontributed, raised/produced by contributions; brought together (L+S); mingled -
40 collatitius
collatitia, collatitium ADJcontributed, raised/produced by contributions; brought together (L+S); mingled
См. также в других словарях:
produced — produced; un·produced; … English syllables
produced — index alleged Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
Produced — Produce Pro*duce , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Produced}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Producing}.] [L. producere, productum, to bring forward, beget, produce; pro forward, forth + ducere to lead. See {Duke}.] [1913 Webster] 1. To bring forward; to lead forth; to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
produced — See american produced north American produced … Dictionary of automotive terms
Produced water — is a term used in the oil industry to describe water that is produced along with the oil and gas. Oil and gas reservoirs have a natural water layer (formation water) that lies under the hydrocarbons. Oil reservoirs frequently contain large… … Wikipedia
produced materials — index commodities Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
Produced by George Martin — Infobox Album | Name = Produced by George Martin Type = Box Set Artist = George Martin Released = July 17, 2001 Recorded = 1950 1997 Genre = Various Length = Label = Parlophone (UK) Capitol (U.S.) Producer = George Martin Reviews = *Allmusic… … Wikipedia
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produced — elongate, projecting, extended … Dictionary of ichthyology
produced — adj. [L. producere, to produce] Elongated; extended; projecting; production n … Dictionary of invertebrate zoology
produced — (Order Isopoda): Extended or lengthened [Kensley and Schotte, 1989] … Crustacea glossary