bicorpor: Difference between revisions

From LSJ

κάμψαι διαύλου θάτερον κῶλον πάλινbend back along the second turn of the race, turning the bend and coming back for the second leg of the double run, run the homeward course, retrace one's steps

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|lnetxt=bicorpor (gen.), bicorporis ADJ :: double-bodied, having two bodies
|lnetxt=bicorpor (gen.), bicorporis ADJ :: [[double-bodied]], [[having two bodies]]
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Revision as of 13:35, 14 May 2024

Latin > English

bicorpor (gen.), bicorporis ADJ :: double-bodied, having two bodies

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

bĭcorpor: ŏris, adj. bis-corpus,
I having two bodies, double-bodied (poet. and very rare; late prose form bĭcorpŏrĕ-us, Firm. Math. 2, 12): bicorpores Gigantes, Naev. Bell. Pun. 2, 14 (ap. Prisc. p. 679 P.): Pallas bicorpor, Att. ap. Prisc. p. 699 P.; and so besides only in Cic. in a transl. from Sophocl. Trachin.: manus, Tusc. 2, 9, 22.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

bĭcorpŏr, ŏris, m. et f. (bis, corpus), qui a deux corps : bicorpor manus [poet.] Cic. Tusc. 2, 22, [trad. de Sophocle] la troupe des centaures || -pŏrĕus, a, um, Firm. Math. 2, 12.

Latin > German (Georges)

bicorpor, oris (bis u. corpus; vgl. Prisc. de fig. num. 31. p. 416, 27 K.), zweileibig, doppelleibig, Pallas bicorpor, Acc. tr. 307: bicorpores Gigantes, Naev. bell. Pun. 1. fr. 18 Vahlen (b. Prisc. 6, 6): haec bicorporem afflixit manum (Schar), Cic. poët. Tusc. 2, 22. – Spät. Nbf. bicorporeus, a, um, Firm. math. 2, 12.