-
21 occīdō
occīdō cīdī, cīsus, ere [ob+caedo], to strike down, knock down: me pugnis, T.—To cut down, cut off, kill, slay: si aliam (noxiam) admisero, occidito, T.: fortissime pugnans occiditur, Cs.: exercitūs occidione occisi, annihilated, L.: ad unum omnes, to the last man, L.: hominem, murder: modus hominis occidendi, form of murder: homines impune occidebantur, murders were committed: se occidere, commit suicide, Cu.—Fig., to plague to death, torture, torment, pester: occidis saepe rogando, H.: legendo, H.—To ruin, undo: me tuis fallaciis, T.* * *Ioccidere, occidi, occasus Vfall, fall down; perish, die, be slain; be ruined/done for, decline, endIIoccidere, occidi, occisus Vkill, murder, slaughter, slay; cut/knock down; weary, be the death/ruin of -
22 per-eō
per-eō iī or (rarely) īvī (perīt, Iu.; perīstī, Pr.; perīsse, L., O.), itūrus, īre, to pass away, come to nothing, vanish, disappear, be lost: ecqua inde perisset soror, T.: ne vena periret aquae, O.: lymphae Dolium pereuntis, H.—To pass away, be destroyed, perish: tantam pecuniam tam brevi tempore perire: totum exercitum periturum, N.: Fac pereat vitreo miles ab hoste tuus (at chess), let your knight be taken by a pawn, O.: causae cur perirent (urbes), H.: peritura regna, V.: pereunt sole tepente nives, melt away, O.: telum robigine, H.—To perish, lose life, die: turpiter: ut intellegeres statim tibi esse pereundum: naufragio: hominum manibus, V.: gener<*>sius, H.: a morbo, N.: pereundi mille figurae, forms of death, O.—Fig., to pine away, fall desperately in love: indigno cum Gallus amore peribat, V: quā pereat sagittā, H. —To be lost, fail, be wasted, be spent in vain: ne et oleum et opera perierit: quia multis actiones et res peribant, lawsuits and property were lost, L.: labor, O.: ne nummi pereant, H.: minae, T.—To be lost, be ruined, be undone: meo vitio pereo.— Esp. 1st pers., as an exclamation of despair, I am lost! I'm undone!: ingenio perii, O.: periimus, actum est, we are lost, it is all over with us, T.: peream, si, etc., may I die, if, etc., O.—Fig., of moral qualities, to be lost: virtus, O.: clament periisse pudorem, H. -
23 pessum
pessum adv. [PED-], to the ground, to the bottom.—With dare, to send to the bottom, ruin, destroy, undo: me aut erum pessum dabunt (nuptiae), T.: sin (animus) ad inertiam pessum datus est, has been abandoned, S.—With ire, to be ruined: pessum ituros campos, Ta.* * *to the lowest part, to the bottom,pessum dare -- destroy, ruin
-
24 praecipitō
praecipitō āvī, ātus, āre [praeceps], to throw headlong, cast down, hurl down, precipitate: p<*>ae in mare praecipitatae, N.: currum scopulis, hurl against, O.: se ex altissimo muro: sese in fossas, Cs.: se (sc. de muro), L.: se in Tiberim, L.: se in medios ignīs, Cu.: etiam pulcherrima, throw overboard, Iu.: cum alii super vallum praecipitarentur, threw themselves down, S.: lux Praecipitatur aquis, sets in the ocean, O.: hac te praecipitato, run this way for life! T.: iis (parvis) minari, praecipitaturos alicunde, threaten to throw them down.—To rush down, throw oneself down, rush headlong, sink rapidly, drop, tumble, fall (of involuntary falling): statim praecipitat in Lirem: nimbi In vada praecipitant, V.: in fossam, L.: sol praecipitans: iam nox caelo Praecipitat, is sinking, V.: hiems iam praecipitaverat, had come to an end, Cs.—Fig., to throw down, hurl down, precipitate: praecipitari ex altissimo dignitatis gradu: semet ipse praecipitare, destroy oneself, S.: se in insidias, L.: furor iraque mentem Praecipitant, carry headlong, V.: quosdam praecipitat potentia Invidiae, Iu.: nox praecipitata, declining, O.— To hasten, hurry: quae Praecipitent obitum, hasten their setting: praecipitata raptim consilia, precipitate, L.: moras, i. e. exchange for haste, V.: dare tempus Praecipitant curae, hasten, V.— To fall down, fall, sink, be ruined: ubi non subest, quo praecipitet, may tumble down: cum ad Cannas praecipitasset Romana res, L.: ad exitium praecipitans.— To be too hasty, be precipitate: sustinenda est adsensio, ne praecipitet: praecipitare istuc quidem est, non descendere, to jump at a conclusion.* * *praecipitare, praecipitavi, praecipitatus Vthrow headlong, cast down -
25 prōcumbō
prōcumbō cubuī, cubitum, ere [CVB-], to fall forwards, sink down, fall prostrate: Gallis ad pedes<*> ne cogerentur, etc., Cs.: genibus, O.: in vestibulo curiae, L.: in genua, Cu.: Coroebus Penelei dextrā Procumbit, V.: certamine summo, bend to their oars, V.— To lean forward, bend down, sink, be beaten down, be broken down, fall: frumenta imbribus procubuerant, i. e. were beaten down, Cs.: ne gravidis procumbat culmus aristis, V.: (domus) in domini procubuit caput, fell in upon, O.: agger in fossam procubuit, L.—Fig., to fall, be ruined: res procubuere meae, O.— To extend, spread, lie: planities sub radicibus montium procumbit, Cu.* * *procumbere, procubui, procubitus Vsink down, lie down, lean forward -
26 prō-lābor
prō-lābor lapsus, ī, to glide forward, slide along, slip: at Canis ad caudam serpens prolabitur Argo, C. poët.: conlapsus pons, usque ad alterius initium pontis prolabi eum leniter cogebat, to slide along, L.—To fall forward, tumble, fall in ruins: equus cum prolapsum per caput regem effudisset, who fell headlong, L.: prolabens ex equo, L.: pro lapsa Pergama, ruined, V.: ipsis adminiculis prolapsis corruere, sliding from under them, L.—Fig., to go forward, be led on: me longius prolapsum esse, quam, etc., have spoken at more length: in misericordiam prolapsus est animus victoris, L.— To slip out, escape: ab aliquā cupiditate prolapsum verbum.—To fall, fail, err, be led astray: timore: cupiditate regni, L.—To fall to decay, sink, decline, go to ruin: ita prolapsa est (iuventus) ut coërcenda sit: rem temeritate eius prolapsam restituit, L. -
27 sēmi-rutus
sēmi-rutus adj., half-razed, half-overthrown, half-demolished, half-destroyed, half-ruined: murus, L.: tecta, L.: castella, L.: patria, L. -
28 conruo
conruere, conrui, conrutus Vfall/break down, fall to ground/from height, collapse; be ruined, come to grief; topple (houses); subside (ground); rush/sweep together; overthrow -
29 corruo
corruere, corrui, corrutus Vfall/break down, fall to ground/from height, collapse; be ruined, come to grief; topple (house/wall), totter; subside (ground); rush/sweep together; overthrow -
30 dispereo
disperire, disperivi(ii), disperitus V INTRANSperish/die; be destroyed; be ruined/lost/undone (completely) (L+S); disappear -
31 intereo
interire, interivi(ii), interitus Vperish, die; be ruined; cease -
32 pereo
perire, perivi(ii), peritus Vdie, pass away; be ruined, be destroyed; go to waste -
33 semirutus
semiruta, semirutum ADJ -
34 concido
I.to be ruined, fail / cut up, cut down, destroy.II.to fall down, sink, perish / (wind) subside. -
35 corruo
to fall to the ground, sink down / be ruined, destroyed. -
36 depereo
to perish, be utterly ruined. -
37 pessum ire
to sink, be ruined, destroyed, be put to an end. -
38 ruo
ruirutumto rush, fall, be ruined. -
39 abominor
I.Lit.: cum dixisset sepulcrum dirutum proram spectare, abominatus, etc., when he had spoken the words “ a ruined sepulchre,” etc., wishing that this ( the sepulchre, or the words spoken) might not be of evil omen, Liv. 30, 25 fin.; so also id. 6, 18, 9; Suet. Claud. 46.—Hence:II.quod abominor,
which may God avert, Ov. M. 9, 677; id. P. 3, 1, 105; Plin. Ep. 6, 22, 7 al.—With inf.:haec universa habere abominabitur,
Sen. Ben. 7, 8.—In gen. (opp. to opto), to abominate, abhor, detest, Liv. 30, 30, 9; Col. 6, prooem. § 1; Quint. 4, 1, 33.—Hence derivv.,1. 2. ► 1. 2.ăbōmĭnor in pass. signif.: saevitia eorum abominaretur ab omnibus, Varr. ap. Prisc. p. 791 P.—So Part.: abominatus, abominated, accursed:Hannibal,
Hor. Epod. 16, 8:semimares,
Liv. 31, 12, 8:bubo funebris et maxime abominatus,
Plin. 10, 12, 16. -
40 absumo
ab-sūmo, mpsi, mptum (not msi, mtum), 3, v. a.I.Orig., to take away; hence, to diminish by taking away. Of things, to consume, to annihilate; of persons, orig. to ruin, to corrupt; later, in a phys. sense, to kill. Thus Hercules, in the transl. of the Trachiniae, complains: sic corpus clade horribili absumptum extabuit, consumed, ap. Cic. Tusc. 2, 8, 20; so Philoctetes in a piece of Attius: jam jam absumor: conficit animam vis vulneris, Att. ap. Cic. Tusc. 2, 7, 19 (Trag. Rel. p. 209 Rib.):II.jam ista quidem absumpta res erit: diesque noctesque estur, bibitur, etc.,
Plaut. Most. 1, 3, 78:absumpti sumus, pater tuus venit,
we are lost, undone! id. ib. 2, 1, 18; id. Am. 5, 1, 6:nisi quid tibi in tete auxili est, absumptus es,
you are ruined, id. Ep. 1, 1, 76:dum te fidelem facere ero voluisti, absumptu's paene,
id. Mil. 2, 4, 55:pytisando modo mihi quid vini absumpsit!
has consumed, Ter. Heaut. 3, 1, 48; so,absumet heres Caecuba dignior,
Hor. C. 2, 14, 25:mensas malis,
Verg. A. 3, 257; cf. id. G. 3, 268; and:absumptis frugum alimentis,
Liv. 23, 30, 3:urbem flammis,
to consume, destroy, Liv. 30, 7, 9; cf. Vell. 2, 130; Plin. Ep. 10, 42:plures fame quam ferro absumpti,
Liv. 22, 39, 14; cf.:quos non oppresserat ignis, ferro absumpti,
killed, id. 30, 6, 6; and:multi ibi mortales ferro ignique absumpti sunt,
id. 5, 7, 3; so,nisi mors eum absumpsisset,
id. 23, 30 fin.; and:animam leto,
Verg. A. 3, 654.—Absumi, to be killed:ubi nuper Epiri rex Alexander absumptus erat,
Liv. 9, 17 fin. —Absumi in aliquid, to be used for any thing, to be changed into:dentes in cornua absumi,
Plin. 11, 37, 45 fin. —Fig., to ruin:cum ille et curā et sumptu absumitur,
Ter. Phorm. 2, 2, 26:satietatem amoris,
to consume, id. ib. 5, 5, 6.—Often of time:ne dicendo tempus absumam,
spend, pass, Cic. Quint. 10; so,quattuor horas dicendo,
Liv. 45, 37, 6:diem,
Ov. Tr. 4, 10, 114:biduum inter cogitationes,
Curt. 3, 6, 8:magnam partem aetatis in hoc,
Quint. 12, 11, 15.
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