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naeresis of ea-.

sanguis; as videt in I, 308.

Line

III. Oratis; as videt in I, 308.

262. Protei; dissyllable by synaeresis of -ei.

265. Idomenei; four syllables by synaeresis of -ei.

323. amor; as videt in X, 872.

383.

469.

Proinde; dissyllable by synaeresis of -oi-.

pater; as videt in I, 308. 480. tanti does not elide the final -¿. 609. Synapheia; as in I, 332. 635. Semianimes; as in IV, 686. 667. abiete; as in II, 16.

890. Arietat; trisyllable by synaeresis of -ie-. See note on abiete, II, 16.

BOOK XII

13. pater; as videt in I, 308. 31. genero does not elide the final -o. 68. ebur; as videt in I, 308.

83.

Orithyia; four syllables; -yi- forming a diphthong.

84. anteirent; trisyllable by synaeresis of -ei-.

232. manus; as videt in I, 308. 356. Semianimi; as in IV, 686.

363. The final vowel of the first -que is long, as in III, 91.

401. Paeonium loses the final -um by ecthlipsis, and is then connected with the following in by synaeresis of ii; thus: Paeon-yin.

422. dolor; as videt in I, 308.

496. baltei; dissyllable by synaeresis of 535. Hyllo does not elide the final -0.

-ei.

720. profugus; as videt in I, 308.

541. aerei; dissyllable by synaeresis of -ei.

764. Nerei; dissyllable by synaeresis of 550. domitor; as videt in I, 308.

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ABBREVIATIONS

a., active.

abl., ablative.
acc., accusative.
adj., adjective.
adv., adverb.
c., common.

cf. (confer), compare.
comp., comparative.
conj., conjunction.
dat., dative.

def., defective.

dem., demonstrative.
dep., deponent.
dim., diminutive.
dissyll., dissyllable.
distrib., distributive.
encl., enclitic.

et al. (et alibi), and else-
where; i.e., not unfre-
quent.

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[NOTE. The parts of compound words are not indicated separately when they appear unmodified in the compound form, nor when prepositions in composition are modified only according to the general rules mentioned under the definitions of prepositions.

In verbs, only the principal parts are given which are understood to be in actual use; and generally one of the numerals, 1, 2, 3, 4, designates the conjugation, and therefore the form of the infinitive.

The numerals following definitions refer to passages in the text.]

VOCABULARY

ā, ab, abs, prep. with abl., from, in | abductus, a, um, p. of abducō. relations of space, time, source, Abella, ae, f., Abella, a town in Cam

cause, and agency; from, 1, 371; following a substantive directly, with ellipsis of participle, 1, 160; at, on, to, 7, 106; from the direction, on the side of, 5, 19; in respect to, II, 174; according to, 9, 235; from a period or point of time, 2, 87; since, after, 1, 730; of persons, by, 2, 429; ā tergō, from the rear, behind, I, 186; ab usque, as far as from, even from, 7, 289. In composition, ab is unchanged before vowels and before i (=j), h, b, d, l, n, r, s; becomes abs before c, q, t, as before p; ā in afui from absum; and au is used in auferō, from ab and ferō, and in aufugio, from ab and fugiō. abāctus, a, um, p. of abigō. Abaris, is, m., a Rutulian warrior, 9, 344.

Abās, antis, m. 1. The twelfth king of Argos, grandson of Danaus, 3, 286. 2. A Trojan, follower of Aeneas, I, 121. 3. An Etruscan, 10, 427. abditus, a, um, p. of abdō. abdo, didī, ditus, 3, a., to put away; with the point or place where, in the abl. alone or with a prep., the acc. with prep., or the dative; to hide, shut up, 1, 60; to bury, plunge, thrust, 2, 553.

abdūcō, dūxī, ductus, 3, a., to lead

away; remove, take away, 3, 601; take away by force, 7, 362; draw back, 5, 428.

|

pania, N. E. of Naples, 7, 740. abeō, īvī, or iī, itus, īre, irreg. n., to go away, depart, 2, 675; go off, go aside, turn off, 5, 162; pass into, sink into, 9, 700; go forward, take the lead, 5, 318; retreat, 2, 382; change or be transformed. abfore, abfui, etc., see absum. abiciō, iēcī, iectus, 3, a. (ab and iaciō), to cast off, away or down, 10, 736. abiectus, a, um, p. of abiciō. abies, etis (often trisyll. in the oblique cases), f., a fir tree; fir wood or fir timber, 2, 16; meton., a ship, 8, 91; a lance, 11, 667.

abigō, ēgī, actus, 3, a. (ab and agō), to drive off or away from, i.e. beyond (others in), 8, 407; drive away, II, 261.

abitus, ūs, m. (abeō), a departure, 8, 214; a passage, or outlet, 9, 380. abiūrō, āvī, ātus, I, a., to swear off; deny upon oath; deny, disavow, 8, 263. ablātus, a, um, p. of auferō. abluō, lui, lutus, 3, a., to wash away,

9, 818; cleanse, purify, wash, 2, 720. ablūtus, a, um, p. of abluō. abnegō, āvī, ātus, I, a., to deny, refuse, with acc. and dat., 7, 424,

with inf., 2, 637; alone, 2, 654. abnuō, nui, nuitus or nutus, 3, a. and n., to shake the head in dissent; refuse, with acc., 4, 108; reject, 5, 531; forbid, with acc. and inf., 10, 8. aboleō, ēvī, itus, 2, a., to cause to wane

or waste; to destroy, 4, 497; cleanse, | abstractus, a, um, p. of abstrahō. efface, wipe out, 11, 789; obliterate abstrahō, trāxī, trāctus, 3, a., to drag the memory of, 1, 720. or lead away, 8, 263.

abolēscō, olēvi, 2, inc. n. (aboleō), to abstrūdō, trūsī, trūsus, 3, a., to push or decay, 7, 232.

abreptus, a, um, p. of abripiō.
abripiō, ripuī, reptus, 3, a. (ab and ra-
piō), to take away violently; snatch,
carry away, I, 108; 4, 600.
abrumpō, rūpī, ruptus, 3, a., to break
off, away, or tear away from, 9, 118;
tear asunder, rend, 3, 199; end sud-
denly or abruptly, 4, 388: put an
end to, 4, 631; violate, 3, 55; p.
abruptus, a, um, having burst, burst-
ing, breaking forth, subst., abrup-
tum, ī, n., anything broken off; a
precipice; abyss, chasm, 3, 422; in
abruptum, headlong, 12, 687.
abruptus, a, um, p. of abrumpō.
abs, prep. See ab.

thrust off; to conceal, hide, 6, 7. abstrūsus, a, um, p. of abstrūdō. abstuli, perf. of auferō.

absum, āfuī or abfui, āfutūrus or abfu-
tūrus, abesse, irreg. n., to be away;
to be absent, 2, 620; distant, II, 907;
to be wanting, missing, 1, 584; inf.,
āfore, or abfore, will be wanting, 8,
147; p., absēns, entis, absent, 4, 83.
absumō, sūmpsī, sumptus, 3, a., to take
away; of death, to end, destroy, 3,
654; exhaust, spend, 7, 301; con-
sume, devour, 3, 257; cut off, end,
I, 555.

absumptus, a, um, p. of absūmō.
abunde, adv., with genit. (abundus),
sufficiently, enough, 7, 552.
abundō, āvī, ātus, I, n., to overflow;
abound; abundāns, antis, overflow-
ing, 11, 547.

abscessus, ūs, m. (abscedo, to go
away), a going away, retreat, 10,
445.
abscido, cīdī, cīsus, 3, a. (abs and ac, see atque.

caedo), to cut off, 12, 511.
abscindō, scidī, scissus, 3, a., to tear
off, away, from, 5, 685; separate, 3,
418; tear, 4, 590.

abscissus, a, um, p. of abscindō. abscondō, condī and condidī, ditus, 3, a., to put out of sight, hide, conceal; to

Acamās, antis, m., Acamas, a son of Theseus and Phaedra, 2, 262. acanthus, ī, m., the plant bear's-foot; the acanthus, 1, 649.

Acarnān, ānis, adj., of Acarnania, a country between Epirus and Aetolia; Acarnanian, 5, 298.

conceal, 4, 337; lose sight of, with- | Acca, ae, f., a companion of Camilla,

draw from, 3, 291. absēns, entis, p. of absum. absistō, abstitī, 3, n., to stand off or away from, followed by the abl., alone or with prep.; withdraw from, 6, 259; fly, dart from, 12, 102; with infin., desist, cease, 6, 399; alone, stop, cease, I, 192.

abstineō, ui, tentus, 2, a. and n. (abs andteneō), to hold or keep off from, or abstain from, with abl., 7, 618; alone, abstain, restrain one's self, 2, 534.

II, 820.

accēdō, cessī, cessus (perf. ind., ac

cēstis for accessistis, I, 201), 3, n. (ad and cedo), to go or draw near to; approach,with acc. alone, 1, 307. accelerō, āvī, ātus, I, a. and n. (ad and

celero), to hasten; make haste, 5, 675. accendo, ī, census, 3, a. (ad and candō, rel. to candeo), to set fire to, light up, enkindle, 5,4; enrage, exasperate, incense, I, 29; incite, rouse, 4, 232.

accēnsus, a, um, p. of accendo. acceptus, a, um, p. of accipiō. accessus, ūs, m. (accēdō), a going near to; an access, approach, 3, 570. 1. accidō, cidī, 3, n. (ad and cadō),

to happen, 12, 593.

2. accidō, cīdi, cīsus, 3, a. (ad and
caedo), to cut into, or up; cut, 2,
627; eat into, devour, consume, 7,
125.

accinctus, a, um, p. of accingō.
accingō, cīnxi, cīnctus (pass. inf., ac-
cingier, 4, 493), 3, a. (ad and cingō),
to gird on; gird, 2, 614; arm, equip,
6, 184; make one's self ready; pre-
pare, 1, 210; resort to, 4, 493.
acciō, cīvī, cītus, 4, a. (ad and cieō), to

summon, call, 11, 235.

accipio, cēpī, ceptus, 3, a. (ad and capiō), to take to one's self; to receive, 1, 304; take in or up, admit, receive, 1, 123; 3, 79; entertain, 3, 353; see, 8, 155; hear, attend, listen to, learn, 2, 65; heed, regard, 4, 611.

accipiter, tris, m., a hawk, 11, 721. accīsus, a, um, p. of accidō.

1. accītus, a, um, p. of acciō.

2. accītus, ūs, m.; used only in the abl. sing. (acciō); a summons, call, I, 677.

accumbō, cubui, cubitus, 3, n. (ac

cubō), to lay one's self down, at or upon; recline, with dat., 1, 79. accumulō, āvī, ātus, I, a. (ad and cumulo), to place heap on heap; heap up, load; honor, 6, 885. accurrō, currī, seldom cucurrī, cursus, 3, n. (ad and currō), to run to; run, hasten up, 5, 451.

ācer, acris, ācre, adj. (for ac-cer, root ac, as in acuō), sharp; fig., bitter, pungent, 7, 291; ardent, active, strong, 1, 220; brave, valiant, 8, 441; spirited, full of life, life-like, 5, 254; elastic, springing, 7, 164; swift, nimble, fiery, 1, 444; fierce, furious, 2, 414; keen, urgent, 1, 362; adv., acriter; comp., acrius, more vigorously.

acerbo, no perf., ātus, 1, a. (acerbus), to embitter; to aggravate, augment, II, 407.

acerbus, a, um, adj. (ācer), harsh, bitter, in taste; fig., cruel, fierce, 5, 462; fatal, direful, sorrowful, sad, mournful, 5, 49; 6, 429; pl., acerba, ōrum, n., vengeful deeds, 12, 500; adv., acerba, harshly, savagely, fiercely, 9, 794.

acernus, a, um, adj. (acer, maple), of maple; maple-, 2, 112.

acclīnis, e, adj. (acclinō, to lean on), leaning on or against, 10, 835. accola, ae, c. (accolō), a neighbor, 7, acervus, ī, m., a heap, pile, 4, 402.

acerra, ae, f., an incense box; a censer, 5, 745.

729.

accolo, colui, cultus, 3, a. (ad and colō),

to dwell near or by. accommodō, āvī, ātus, I, a. (ad and commodo), to fit one thing to another; to buckle, gird, 2, 393. accommodus, a, um, adj. (ad and com

modus), fit, suitable, 11, 522. accubō, uī, itus, 1, n. (ad and cumbō), | to lie near or by, to recline, 6, 606; bend over, project.

Acesta, ae, f., a town in Sicily, named

after Acestes, 5, 718.

Acestēs, ae, m., Acestes or Segestus,
the son of Crimisus, a Sicilian river
god, and Egesta or Segesta, a Trojan
woman, I, 195.
Achaemenidēs, ae, m., Achaemenides,
a companion of Ulysses, 3, 614.
Achāicus (poet., Achāius), a, um,
adj. (Achaia), of Achaia; Achaean;
Grecian, 2, 462,

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