aequanimus: Difference between revisions

From LSJ

ἀλλ’ οὔτε πολλὰ τραύματ’ ἐν στέρνοις λαβὼν θνῄσκει τις, εἰ μὴ τέρμα συντρέχοι βίου, οὔτ’ ἐν στέγῃ τις ἥμενος παρ’ ἑστίᾳ φεύγει τι μᾶλλον τὸν πεπρωμένον μόρον → But a man will not die, even though he has been wounded repeatedly in the chest, should the appointed end of his life not have caught up with him; nor can one who sits beside his hearth at home escape his destined death any the more

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{{Lewis
{{Lewis
|lshtext=<b>aequănĭmus</b>: a, um [[aequus]]-[[animus]], adj.,<br /><b>I</b> [[even]]-tempered, [[patient]], [[composed]], [[calm]]: [[aequanimus]] fiam, Aus. Sept. Sap. 3: nulla fuit res parva [[umquam]] [[aequanimis]], id. Idyll. 3, 9>
|lshtext=<b>aequănĭmus</b>: a, um [[aequus]]-[[animus]], adj.,<br /><b>I</b> [[even]]-tempered, [[patient]], [[composed]], [[calm]]: [[aequanimus]] fiam, Aus. Sept. Sap. 3: nulla fuit res parva [[umquam]] [[aequanimis]], id. Idyll. 3, 9>
}}
{{Gaffiot
|gf=<b>æquănĭmus</b>, a, um, dont l’esprit [[est]] égal, mesuré : Aus. Idyll. 3, 10.
}}
}}

Revision as of 06:32, 14 August 2017

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

aequănĭmus: a, um aequus-animus, adj.,
I even-tempered, patient, composed, calm: aequanimus fiam, Aus. Sept. Sap. 3: nulla fuit res parva umquam aequanimis, id. Idyll. 3, 9>

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

æquănĭmus, a, um, dont l’esprit est égal, mesuré : Aus. Idyll. 3, 10.