antedico: Difference between revisions

From LSJ

τί δ' ἢν ῥαφανιδωθῇ πιθόμενός σοι τέφρᾳ τε τιλθῇ, ἕξει τινὰ γνώμην λέγειν τὸ μὴ εὐρύπρωκτος εἶναι; → What if he should have a radish shoved up his ass because he trusted you and then have hot ashes rip off his hair? What argument will he be able to offer to prevent himself from having a gaping-anus | but suppose he trusts in your advice and gets a radish rammed right up his arse, and his pubic hairs are burned with red-hot cinders. Will he have some reasoned argument to demonstrate he's not a loose-arsed bugger

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{{Lewis
{{Lewis
|lshtext=<b>antĕdīco</b>: and antĕdictus, [[better]] written [[separately]], [[ante]] dīco, etc., v. [[ante]] and [[dico]].
|lshtext=<b>antĕdīco</b>: and antĕdictus, [[better]] written [[separately]], [[ante]] dīco, etc., v. [[ante]] and [[dico]].
}}
{{Georges
|georg=[[ante]]-dīco, richtiger getrennt [[ante]] [[dico]], s. [[ante]] u. [[dico]].
}}
}}

Revision as of 09:16, 15 August 2017

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

antĕdīco: and antĕdictus, better written separately, ante dīco, etc., v. ante and dico.

Latin > German (Georges)

ante-dīco, richtiger getrennt ante dico, s. ante u. dico.