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1 āspernor
āspernor ātus, ārī, dep. [ab + spernor], to disdain, reject, despise: familiam, T.: vos animo: consilia, L.: voluptatem ratione: velut diis aspernantibus placamina irae, L.: furorem a suis aris: alqm militiae dare, refuse, Ta.: haud aspernatus Tullius, consented, L.: non aspernante senatu, with the consent of: a philosopho, to be averse.—Pass.: haud aspernanda precare, V.* * *aspernari, aspernatus sum V DEPdespise, scorn, disdain; spurn, push away, repel, reject; refuse, decline -
2 conculcō
conculcō āvī, ātus, āre [com- + calco], to tread upon, trample: virum.—Fig., to tread down, trample, abuse, despise, contemn: istum conculcandum putaverunt: huic conculcandam Italiam tradere: lauream: rem p. conculcatam ridere.* * *conculcare, conculcavi, conculcatus V TRANStread/trample upon/underfoot/down; crush, oppress; despise, disregard -
3 dēspectō
dēspectō —, —, āre, intens. [despicio], to look down upon: terras, V., O.: Palantīs homines procul, O.— To overlook, command: quos despectant moenia, V.— To despise: liberos, Ta.* * *despectare, despectavi, despectatus V TRANSlook over/down at, survey; overlook; rise above, overtop; despise/look down on -
4 dēspiciō
dēspiciō ēxī, ectus, ere [de + specio], to look down upon: de vertice montis in vallīs, O.: colles, quā despici poterat, in the range of view, Cs.— With acc, (some read dispicio in these passages): gentīs et urbīs: aethere summo mare, V.: omne nemus, O.—Fig., to be inattentive, be off guard: simul atque ille despexerit.—With acc, to look down upon, despise, disdain: omnīs: a populo R. despici: divitias: ignobilitatem Iugurthae, S.: despectā paucitate impetum faciunt, Cs.: neque ullum laborem despiciens, refusing, Cs.: Despectus tibi sum, V.: homines despecti: huic despecto saluti fuit, N.— To disparage, express contempt for: Caesaris copias, Cs.* * *despicere, despexi, despectus Vlook down on/over; relax attention; disdain, despise; express contempt for -
5 fastīdiō
fastīdiō īvī, ītus, īre [fastidium], to feel disgust, shrink, flinch, loathe, dislike, despise: infundam tibi Fastidienti poculum, H.: omnia praeter Pavonem, H.: pulmentarium, Ph.—Fig., to be disdainful, be scornful, be haughty, disdain, despise, scorn: in recte factis, i. e. to be critical: si non fastidis, veni, Ph.: eius amicitiam: rivos apertos, H.: preces alcuius, L.: si te hic fastidit, V.: somnus non humilīs domos Fastidit, shuns, H.: Non fastiditus si tibi ero, O.: iocorum legere genus, Ph.: nos in sacerdotum numerum accipere, L.: se inspici, L.* * *fastidire, fastidivi, fastiditus Vdisdain; be scornful; feel aversion to, be squeamish -
6 neglegō
neglegō (not negligō, neclegō), ēxī (neglegisset, S.), ēctus, ere [nec+lego], to disregard, not heed, not trouble oneself about, not attend to, slight, neglect, be regardless of, be indifferent to: Neglegitur ipsa, T.: mandatum: rem familiarem, N.: neglecti agri, H.: hoc facere, Cs.: diem edicti obire neglexit: de Theopompo negleximus.— To make light of, not care for, slight, despise, disregard, contemn, neglect: segnior fit, ubi neglegas, when you neglect him, S.: Pecuniam, T.: periculum capitis sui prae meā salute: cum et bellum ita necessarium sit, ut neglegi non possit: Aeduorum iniurias, overlook, Cs.: hac parte neglectā, i. e. unpunished, Cs.: verba verbis quasi coagmentare neglegat, disdains: committere fraudem, to make light of perpetrating, H.: Theopompum confugere Alexandream.* * *neglegere, neglexi, neglectus V TRANSdisregard, neglect, ignore, regard of no consequence; do nothing about; despise -
7 spernō
spernō sprēvī, sprētus, ere [SPAR-], to separate (old); hence, to despise, contemn, reject, scorn, spurn: abs te spernor? T.: qui te spernit: me animo, V.: comitemne sororem Sprevisti moriens, V.: veritas auspiciorum spreta est: doctrina deos spernens, L.: Consilium, O.: dulcīs amores, H.: partem solido demere de die, H.: obsequio deferri spernit aquarum, O.* * *spernere, sprevi, spretus Vscorn, despise, spurn -
8 temnō
temnō —, —, ere [1 TEM-], to slight, scorn, disdain, despise, contemn: volgaria, H.: divos, V.: ne temne, quod Praeferimus manibus vittas, V.* * *temnere, -, - Vscorn, despise -
9 contemno
Icontemnere, contempsi, contemptus V TRANSthink little of; look down on, take poor view of; pay no heed/disregard/slight; treat with/hold in contempt, scorn, disdain; despise; keep away from, avoidIIcontemnere, contemsi, contemtus V TRANSthink little of; look down on, take poor view of; pay no heed/disregard/slight; treat with/hold in contempt, scorn, disdain; despise; keep away from, avoid -
10 despicor
Idespicari, despicatus sum V DEPdespise; scorn, disdainIIdespicari, despicatus sum V DEPdespise; disdain -
11 despicio
I.To look down upon any thing (for syn. cf.: contemno, sperno, aspernor).A.Lit. (mestly poet.).(α).Neutr.: ad te per impluvium tuum, Plaut. Mil. 2, 6, 72; 2, 3, 16:(β).de vertice montis in valles,
Ov. M. 11, 504:a summo caelo in aequora,
id. A. A. 2, 87:medios in agros,
id. M. 1, 601:in vias,
Hor. Od. 3, 7, 30 al. — Absol.:vultus suspicientis et despicientis,
Plin. 35, 8, 34, § 56.— Pass. impers.:colles, qua despici poterat,
Caes. B. G. 7, 36, 2; Liv. 44, 6; Amm. 19, 5.—Act.:B.si quis Pacuviano invehens curru multas et varias gentis et urbis despicere et oculis conlustrare possit,
Cic. Rep. 3, 9, 14:Juppiter aethere summo Despiciens mare velivolum terrasque jacentis, etc.,
Verg. A. 1, 224 (v. Conington ad loc.); cf. Ov. M. 2, 178; id. F. 4, 569:e tumulis subjectam urbem,
Sil. 12, 488:culmine cuncta,
Luc. 5, 251:cavā montis convalle,
Verg. G. 2, 187 (Forb. ad loc.):quos (populos) despicit Arctos,
Luc. 1, 458.—(Acc. to Lachm. ad Lucr. vol. 2, p. 236, despicio with acc. always has the trop. force, to despise; and in all these passages should be read dispicere; and so Rib. in Verg., Munro ad Lucr. 4, 418; cf. dispicio.)—Trop. as v. act., to look down upon, to despise, disdain (class. and very freq. —syn.:* II.contemnere, spernere): ut omnes despiciat, ut hominem prae se neminem putet,
Cic. Rosc. Am. 46 fin.; cf. id. Fin. 3, 18 fin.; id. Rep. 1, 17:divitias (with contemnere honores),
id. Lael. 23:suos,
Caes. B. C. 3, 59, 3;ipsos,
id. B. G. 1, 13, 5:legionem propter paucitatem,
id. ib. 3, 2, 3; cf.copias,
id. B. C. 3, 23; 87:paucitatem militum,
id. ib. 3, 111; id. B. G. 6, 39 fin.:ullum laborem aut munus,
to disdain, decline, shun, id. B. C. 3, 8 fin. et saep.:dum despicis omnes,
Verg. E. 8, 32; Ov. M. 9, 438 et saep.—In part. perf.:homines despecti et contempti,
Cic. Sest. 40, 87; cf.:huic despecto saluti fuit,
Nep. Thras. 2, 2 (corresp. with contemptus and contemnentibus).—Partic. with the gen.:despiciens sui,
Cic. de Or. 2, 89 extr.; and poet.:despectus taedae,
Sil. 8, 54.—To look away, not to regard, not to attend:simul atque ille despexerit,
Cic. Rosc. Am. 8, 22.— Hence, P. a., dēspectus, a, um, contemptible, despicable:natura ejus,
Tac. A. 13, 47: Euphrates, ingens modo, inde tenuis rivus, despectus emoritur, Mela, 3, 8, 5.— Comp.: improbos despectiores facere, Boëth. Cons. Phil. 3, pros. 4, p. 47 Obbar. -
12 fastidio
fastīdĭo, īvi, or ĭi, ītum, 4, v. n. and a. [fastidium], to feel disgust, loathing, or nausea, to shrink or flinch from any thing unpleasant to the taste, smell, hearing, etc.; to loathe, dislike, despise (not freq. till after the Aug. per.; cf.: taedet, reprobo, reicio, respuo, repudio).I.Lit.A.Neutr.:B.bi bendum hercle hoc est, ne nega: quid hic fastidis?
Plaut. Stich. 5, 4, 33; cf.:fastidientis stomachi est multa degustare,
Sen. Ep. 2:majus infundam tibi Fastidienti poculum,
Hor. Epod. 5, 78:ut fastidis!
Plaut. Men. 1, 2, 58.—Act. (perh. not till the Aug. per.):II. A.num esuriens fastidis omnia praeter Pavonem rhombumque?
Hor. S. 1, 2, 115:olus,
id. Ep. 1, 17, 15:pulmentarium,
Phaedr. 3, 7, 23:cactos in cibis,
Plin. 21, 16, 57, § 97:fluvialem lupum,
Col. 8, 16, 4: vinum, Poët. ap. Suet. Tib. 59:euphorbiae sucus fastidiendum odorem habet,
disgusting, Plin. 25, 7, 38, § 79:aures... redundantia ac nimia fastidiunt,
Quint. 9, 4, 116.—Neutr.:(β).ut fastidit gloriosus!
Plaut. Curc. 5, 2, 34:vide ut fastidit simia!
id. Most. 4, 2, 4:in recte factis saepe fastidiunt,
Cic. Mil. 16, 42.—With gen. (like taedet):B.fastidit mei,
Plaut. Aul. 2, 2, 67; so, mei, Titin. ap. Non. 496, 15:bonorum,
Lucil. ib. 18.—Act. (perh. not before the Aug. per.).(α).With acc.:(β).(populus) nisi quae terris semota suisque Temporibus defuncta videt, fastidit et odit,
Hor. Ep. 2, 1, 22:vilice silvarum et agelli, Quem tu fastidis,
id. Ep. 1, 14, 2:lacus et rivos apertos,
id. ib. 1, 3, 11:vitium amici,
id. S. 1, 3, 44:preces alicujus,
Liv. 34, 5, 13:hoc lucrum,
Quint. 1, 1, 18:grammatices elementa tamquam parva,
id. 1, 4, 6:minores,
Mart. 3, 31, 5:omnes duces post Alexandrum,
Just. 14, 2:dominationibus aliis fastiditus (i. e. a prioribus principibus despectus),
Tac. A. 13, 1:ut quae dicendo refutare non possumus, quasi fastidiendo calcemus,
Quint. 5, 13, 22:oluscula,
Juv. 11, 80.—Of inanim. or abstr. subjects: te cum fastidierit popina dives, etc.,
Mart. 5, 44, 10: somnus agrestium Lenis virorum non humiles domos Fastidit umbrosamve ripam, Hor. C. 3, 1, 23.—In the part. perf.:laudatus abunde, Non fastiditus si tibi, lector, ero,
Ov. Tr. 1, 7, 31; cf.:aliquem non fastiditis annumerare viris,
id. ib. 2, 120:vetulus bos, ab ingrato jam fastiditus aratro,
Juv. 10, 270.—In the neutr. absol.: res ardua vetustis novitatem dare... fastiditis gratiam, etc., Plin. H. N. praef. § 15.—In the part. fut. pass. with supine:quia (verba) dictu fastidienda sunt,
Val. Max. 9, 13, 2.—With an object-clause:1.a me fastidit amari,
Ov. R. Am. 305:jocorum legere fastidis genus,
Phaedr. 4, 7, 2; Petr. 127:fastidit praestare hanc inferioribus curam,
Quint. 2, 3, 4:fastidit balsamum alibi nasci,
Plin. 16, 32, 59, § 135:an creditis, aequo animo iis servire, quorum reges esse fastidiant?
Curt. 4, 14, 16 et saep.:ne fastidieris nos in sacerdotum numerum accipere,
Liv. 10, 8, 7:plebs coepit fastidire, munus vulgatum a civibus isse in socios,
id. 2, 41, 4; Quint. 5, 11, 39.—Hence,Adv.: fastīdĭenter, disdainfully, scornfully:2.parentibus fastidienter appellatis,
App. M. 5, p. 166, 11.—Part.: fastīdītus, a, um, in act. signif., disdaining, despising (post-Aug.):ne me putes studia fastiditum,
Petr. 48. -
13 con - temnō
con - temnō tempsī (-temsī), temptus (-temtus), ere, to value little, esteem lightly, contemn, despise, disdain, disregard, defy: ea, quae plerique expetunt: exercitum prae Gallicanis legionibus: paucitatem eorum, L.: paucitatem in hoste, Cu.: tuom Consilium, T.: parva ista, L.: opes, V.: mortem: Antoni gladios, Iu.: contempta fontis Iura maerens, the outrage upon, O.: lippus inungi, H.: ipsum vinci, regard as a trifle: (amplitudo animi) eminet contemnendis doloribus: contemni se putant (senes): tenuissimum quemque: nostros, Cs.: contemnēre miser, H.: Othone contempto, in defiance of, H.: se non contemnere, to have a high estimate of: nec (Batavi) tributis contemnuntur, are humiliated, Ta.: quae res illis contemnentibus pernicii fuit, N. — To slight, speak contemptuously of, disparage: Numquid habes quod contemnas? any fault to find? T.: Murenae genus: populi voces, Sic, H.—Fig., to defy, be safe from, not to fear, to make light of, disregard: (insulam) dedit contemnere ventos, i. e. sheltered, V.: contemnere ventos (vitīs) Adsuescant, V.: mediam Charybdim, Iu. -
14 in-dīgnor
in-dīgnor ātus, ārī, dep. [indignus], to deem unworthy, be indignant, despise, resent, be offended: ea, quae indignentur adversarii: suam vicem, L.: pontem indignatus Araxes, disdaining to bear, V.: indignantes milites, quod, etc., Cs.: quod sola careret Munere, V.: vinci, O.: parere clienti, Iu.: Indignatur narrari cena, etc., i. e. is not fit, H.: regem ad causam dicendam evocari, Cs. -
15 rēiciō
rēiciō (not reiiciō; imper. reice, disyl., V.), rēiēcī, iectus, ere [re-+iacio], to throw back, fling back, hurl back: telum in hostīs, Cs.: togam ab umero, L.: ex umeris amictum, V.: de corpore vestem, O.: paenulam: ab ore colubras, O.: Capillus circum caput Reiectus neglegenter, T.: scutum, throw over the back (in flight): fatigata membra, i. e. stretch on the ground, Cu.: a se mea pectora, to push back, O.: (librum) e gremio suo, fling away, O.: oculos Rutulorum reicit arvis, averts, V.: pascentīs a flumine reice capellas, drive back, V.: in postremam aciem, throw to the rear, L.: se in eum, into his arms, T.— To force back, beat back, repel, repulse: eos in oppidum, Cs.: Tusci reiecti armis, V. ab Antiocheā hostem.— Pass, to be driven back: navīs tempestate reiectas revertisse, Cs.: reflantibus ventis reici: ex cursu Dyrrachium reiecti, L.—Fig., to drive back, drive away, cast off, remove, repel, reject: ad famem hunc ab studio, T.: ferrum et audaciam: retrorsum Hannibalis minas, H.— To reject contemptuously, refuse, scorn, disdain, despise: nos, T.: petentem, O.: Lydiam, H.: refutetur ac reiciatur ille clamor: quae cum reiecta relatio esset, when the appeal was overruled, L.: volgarīs taedas, O.: Reiectā praedā, H.: dona nocentium, H.— P. n. as s<*>bst.: reicienda, evils to be rejected: reiecta.—Of judges, to set aside, challenge peremptorily, reject: ex CXXV iudicibus quinque et LXX: potestas reiciendi, right of challenge.—Of persons, to refer, direct, assign: ad ipsam te epistulam: in hunc gregem Sullam, transfer (in your judgment).—In public life, to refer, turn over (for deliberation or decision): totam rem ad Pompeium, Cs.: ab tribunis ad senatum res est reiecta, L.: id cum ad senatum relatum esset, L.: ut nihil huc reicias: legati ab senatu reiecti ad populum, referred, L.—In time, to defer, postpone: a Kal. Febr. legationes in Idūs Febr. reiciebantur: repente abs te in mensem Quintilem reiecti sumus.* * *reicere, rejeci, rejectus V TRANSthrow back; drive back; repulse, repel; refuse, reject, scorn -
16 spernor
spernor —, ārī, to despise: viduas, Iu. (dub.). -
17 contempno
contempnere, contempsi, contemptus V TRANSthink little of; look down on, take poor view of; pay no heed/disregard/slight; treat with/hold in contempt, scorn, disdain; despise; keep away from, avoid -
18 desperno
despernere, desprevi, despretus V TRANSdespise utterly/greatly/completely; disdain (L+S) -
19 exhonoro
exhonorare, exhonoravi, exhonoratus V TRANSdishonor; despise -
20 neclego
neclegere, neclexi, neclectus V TRANSdisregard, neglect, ignore, regard of no consequence; do nothing about; despise
См. также в других словарях:
Despise — De*spise , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Despised}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Despising}.] [OF. despis , in some forms of despire to despise, fr. L. despicere, despectum, to look down upon, despise; de + spicere, specere, to look. See {Spy}, and cf. {Despicable},… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
despise — despise, contemn, scorn, disdain, scout mean to regard a person or thing as beneath one s notice or as unworthy of one s attention or interest. The same differences in implications and connotations are observable in the corresponding nouns… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Despise the Sun — EP by Suffocation Released April 30, 1998 … Wikipedia
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despise — [di spīz′] vt. despised, despising [ME despisen < OFr despis , stem of despirer < L despicere, to look down upon, despise < de, down, from + specere, to look at: see SPECTACLE] 1. to look down on with contempt and scorn 2. to regard with … English World dictionary
despise — c.1300, from O.Fr. despis , prp. stem of despire to despise, from L. despicere look down on, scorn, from de down (see DE (Cf. de )) + spicere/specere look at (see SCOPE (Cf. scope) (1)). Related … Etymology dictionary
despise — index contemn, decry, disdain, disfavor, dishonor (deprive of honor), flout, misprize, rebuff, reject … Law dictionary
despise — must be spelt ise, not ize. See ise … Modern English usage
despise — [v] look down on abhor, abominate, allergic to*, contemn, deride, detest, disdain, disregard, eschew, execrate, feel contempt for, flout, hate, have no use for*, loathe, look down nose at*, misprize, neglect, put down*, reject, renounce,… … New thesaurus
despise — ► VERB ▪ feel contempt or repugnance for. DERIVATIVES despiser noun. ORIGIN Latin despicere look down … English terms dictionary
Despise the sun — Suffocation – Despise the Sun Veröffentlichung 1998 Label Vulture Records Format(e) CD Genre(s) Death Metal / Deathgrind Anzahl der Titel 5 Laufzeit 16 min 33 s Bese … Deutsch Wikipedia