fore: Difference between revisions
From LSJ
αἰθὴρ δ᾽ ἐλαφραῖς πτερύγων ῥιπαῖς ὑποσυρίζει (Aeschylus, Prometheus Bound 126) → The bright air fanned | whistles and shrills with rapid beat of wings.
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{{Woodhouse1 | {{Woodhouse1 | ||
|Text=[[File:woodhouse_336.jpg|thumb | |Text=[[File:woodhouse_336.jpg|thumb|link={{filepath:woodhouse_336.jpg}}]]'''adj.''' | ||
|link={{filepath:woodhouse_336.jpg}}]]'''adj.''' | |||
P. and V. [[πρόσθιος]] (Eur., ''Rhes.''), P. [[ἐμπρόσθιος]]. | P. and V. [[πρόσθιος]] (Eur., ''Rhes.''), P. [[ἐμπρόσθιος]]. | ||
<b class="b2">To the fore</b>, met., adj.: see [[conspicuous]]. | <b class="b2">To the fore</b>, met., adj.: see [[conspicuous]]. |
Revision as of 17:10, 18 May 2020
English > Greek (Woodhouse)
adj.
P. and V. πρόσθιος (Eur., Rhes.), P. ἐμπρόσθιος. To the fore, met., adj.: see conspicuous.
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
fŏre:
I inf., irregular, from the obsolete fuo, and equivalent to futurum esse; and fŏrem, fores, foret, forent, subj. imperf., equivalent to essem, esses, etc., v. sum init.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
fŏrĕ, inf. fut. de sum || abl. de foris.