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61 pullulo
pullŭlo, āvi, ātum, 1, v. n. and a. [1. pullulus].I. A.Lit., of plants and animals:B.pullulat ab radice,
Verg. G. 2, 17:quo laetius pullulent (vites),
Col. 4, 27, 1.— Of animals, to bring forth young:tot pullulat atra colubris,
Verg. A. 7, 329.—Trop.:II.pullulare incipiebat luxuria,
to spread, grow, increase, Nep. Cat. 2, 3:sors nascentium obitorum loco pullulat,
App. Mund. 23, p. 68, 12; cf. Amm. 22, 4, 3; Cypr. Cath. Eccl. Un. 16 init. —Act., to bring forth, produce:terras Venerem aliam pullulasse,
App. M. 4, p. 301:aperiatur terra, et pullulet salvatorem,
Lact. 4, 12, 9:fetus,
Fulg. Myth. 1, 12. -
62 relucesco
rĕ-lūcesco, luxi, lucescĕre, v. inch. n. [re-luceo], to grow bright again, to shine out, become clear ( poet.):luna plena luminis effigie relucescit,
Mart. Cap. 8, § 870:solis imago reluxit,
Ov. M. 14, 769:reluxit dies,
Tac. H. 4, 81 fin. — Impers.:paulum reluxit,
Plin. Ep. 6, 20, 16. -
63 subnascor
sub-nascor, nātus, 3, v. dep. n., to grow up under, out of, or after; to follow after, succeed (not ante-Aug.):num vada subnatis imo viridentur ab herbis,
Ov. Hal. 90:qui (cortex) subnascente alio expellitur,
Plin. 17, 24, 37, § 234; so,folia,
id. 16, 22, 34, § 84:poma,
id. 12, 3, 7, § 15:castaneae,
id. 17, 20, 34, § 148:pilus,
id. 11, 39, 94, § 230:plumae,
id. 11, 23, 27, § 78:ulcera,
Sen. Brev. Vit. 5, 5:aqua, id. Ira, 2, 10, 5: ignis,
Sil. 14, 65. -
64 veterasco
vĕtĕrasco, rāvi, 3, v. inch. n. [id.], to grow old: veterascens ad gloriam, Cic. Fragm. ap. Non. p. 437, 29:pati aliquid veterascere,
Col. 2, 14, 2: ut nec vestimenta veterascerent, etc., wear out, Ambros. de Fide, 2, 2, 23:cum febres veteraverunt,
Cels. 3, 12, 6 (dub.; al. inveter-); Sen. Cons. ad Marc. 1, 8 (dub.;Haase, verterunt): et omnes sicut vestimentum veterascent,
Vulg. Psa. 101, 27.
См. также в других словарях:
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grow out — phrasal verb [intransitive] Word forms grow out : present tense I/you/we/they grow out he/she/it grows out present participle growing out past tense grew out past participle grown out if coloured, cut, or permed hair grows out, it grows so that… … English dictionary
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grow out of sth — UK US grow out of sth Phrasal Verb with grow({{}}/grəʊ/ verb (grew, grown) ► to happen as a result of or as a natural development from something: »The equity boom of the 1980s and 1990s grew out of the crushing bear market and stagflation of the… … Financial and business terms
ˌgrow ˈout of sth — phrasal verb 1) if children grow out of clothes, they grow bigger and the clothes become too small for them 2) if someone grows out of a habit, they stop doing it because they have become older or wiser 3) to develop from something The idea grew… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
grow out of — phrasal : outgrow the boy grew out of his clothes before Britain grew out of tyranny P.L.Ritzema * * * become too large to wear (a garment) blazers that they grew out of ■ become too mature to retain (a childish habit) most children grow out of… … Useful english dictionary
grow out of — verb a) To become too physically large for something, especially clothes. I give my old clothes to charity when Ive grown out of them. b) To become too mature for something. Still, I see you mean well enough, and are merely suffering from the… … Wiktionary