definite: Difference between revisions
ποταμῷ γὰρ οὐκ ἔστιν ἐμβῆναι δὶς τῷ αὐτῷ → it is impossible to step twice in the same river, you cannot step twice into the same rivers
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|Text=[[File:woodhouse_205.jpg|thumb | |Text=[[File:woodhouse_205.jpg|thumb | ||
|link={{filepath:woodhouse_205.jpg | |link={{filepath:woodhouse_205.jpg}}]]'''adj.''' | ||
P. and V. [[σαφής]]. | P. and V. [[σαφής]]. |
Revision as of 10:08, 15 August 2017
English > Greek (Woodhouse)
adj.
P. and V. σαφής.
Exact: P. and V. ἀκριβής.
Well-defined, fixed: P. and V. βέβαιος.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
dēfīnītē¹⁵ (definitus), d’une manière déterminée, précise, distincte : Cic. de Or. 2, 118 ; Balbo 32.
Latin > German (Georges)
dēfīnītē, Adv. m. Superl. (definitus), abgegrenzt = mit gehöriger, bestimmter Begrenzung, mit spezieller Beziehung, bestimmt, ausdrücklich, speziell, qui nihil (potest) partite, definite, distincte dicere, Cic.: ›belli‹ autem ›ferias‹ festive magis dixit, quam aperte atque definite, Gell.: nec magis (te) distincte definiteque designat, qui etc., Plin. pan.: vel separatim (ohne spezielle Beziehung, im allgemeinen, abstrakt) dicere solemus de genere universo vel definite (mit spezieller Beziehung, konkret) de singulis temporibus, hominibus, causis, Cic.: lex Gellia et Cornelia, quae definite potestatem Pompeio civitatem donandi dederat, Cic.: Superl., definitissime credite, Ps. Augustin. serm. app. 77, 4.