popa: Difference between revisions
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|gf=(1) <b>pŏpa</b>,¹³ æ, m., victimaire : Cic. Mil. 65 || adj<sup>t</sup>, [[popa]] [[venter]] Pers. 6, 74, le ventre gras d’un sacrificateur.<br />(2) <b>pŏpa</b>, æ, f., femme qui tient un restaurant, cabaretière : CIL 6, 9824. | |gf=(1) <b>pŏpa</b>,¹³ æ, m., victimaire : Cic. Mil. 65 || adj<sup>t</sup>, [[popa]] [[venter]] Pers. 6, 74, le ventre gras d’un sacrificateur.<br />(2) <b>pŏpa</b>, æ, f., femme qui tient un restaurant, cabaretière : CIL 6, 9824.||adj<sup>t</sup>, [[popa]] [[venter]] Pers. 6, 74, le ventre gras d’un sacrificateur.<br />(2) <b>pŏpa</b>, æ, f., femme qui tient un restaurant, cabaretière : CIL 6, 9824. | ||
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Revision as of 07:44, 14 August 2017
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
pŏpa: ae, m.
I A Roman inferior priest, a priest's assistant or minister, who brought the victim to the altar and felled it with an axe, Suet. Calig. 32 fin.; Prop. 4 (5), 3, 62; Cic. Mil. 24, 65; Serv. Verg. A. 12, 120. Alluding to the corpulence of such priests: popa venter, a fat paunch, glutton, Pers. 6, 74.—*
II In fem.: PHILEMA POPA DE INSVLA, perh. = she who sells animals for sacrifice, Inscr. Orell. 2457. >
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
(1) pŏpa,¹³ æ, m., victimaire : Cic. Mil. 65 || adjt, popa venter Pers. 6, 74, le ventre gras d’un sacrificateur.
(2) pŏpa, æ, f., femme qui tient un restaurant, cabaretière : CIL 6, 9824.