definite: Difference between revisions
ἁρμονίη ἀφανὴς φανερῆς κρείττων → the hidden attunement is better than the obvious one, invisible connection is stronger than visible, harmony we can't see is stronger than harmony we can, unseen harmony is stronger than what we can see
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{{Woodhouse1 | {{Woodhouse1 | ||
|Text=[[File:woodhouse_205.jpg|thumb | |Text=[[File:woodhouse_205.jpg|thumb|link={{filepath:woodhouse_205.jpg}}]]'''adj.''' | ||
|link={{filepath:woodhouse_205.jpg}}]]'''adj.''' | |||
P. and V. [[σαφής]]. | P. and V. [[σαφής]]. |
Revision as of 17:14, 18 May 2020
English > Greek (Woodhouse)
adj.
P. and V. σαφής.
Exact: P. and V. ἀκριβής.
Well-defined, fixed: P. and V. βέβαιος.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
dēfīnītē¹⁵ (definitus), d’une manière déterminée, précise, distincte : Cic. de Or. 2, 118 ; Balbo 32.
Latin > German (Georges)
dēfīnītē, Adv. m. Superl. (definitus), abgegrenzt = mit gehöriger, bestimmter Begrenzung, mit spezieller Beziehung, bestimmt, ausdrücklich, speziell, qui nihil (potest) partite, definite, distincte dicere, Cic.: ›belli‹ autem ›ferias‹ festive magis dixit, quam aperte atque definite, Gell.: nec magis (te) distincte definiteque designat, qui etc., Plin. pan.: vel separatim (ohne spezielle Beziehung, im allgemeinen, abstrakt) dicere solemus de genere universo vel definite (mit spezieller Beziehung, konkret) de singulis temporibus, hominibus, causis, Cic.: lex Gellia et Cornelia, quae definite potestatem Pompeio civitatem donandi dederat, Cic.: Superl., definitissime credite, Ps. Augustin. serm. app. 77, 4.
Latin > English
definite ADV :: precisely, definitely, distinctly, clearly; expressly, in particular instances