curio: Difference between revisions

From LSJ

Sunt verba voces quibus hunc lenire dolorem possis, magnam morbi deponere partem → Words will avail the wretched mind to ease and much abate the dismal black disease.

Horace, Epistles 1.34
(6_4)
(No difference)

Revision as of 08:17, 13 August 2017

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

cūrĭo: ōnis, m. curia.
I The priest of a curia, Varr. L. L. 5, § 83; 6, § 46 Müll.: maximus, he who presided over all the curiæ, Liv. 27, 8, 1; cf. Paul. ex Fest. p. 126, 17 Müll.—
II Post-Aug., a crier, herald, = praeco, Mart. lib. 2 praef.; Treb. Gall. 12.
cūrĭo: ōnis, m. adj. cura (a humorously-formed word, corresp. with curiosus),
I wasted by sorrow, lean, emaciated: agnus, Plaut. Aul. 3, 6, 27 sq. (v. the passage in connection); cf. Paul. ex Fest. p. 60, 3 Müll.