Ask at the forum if you have an Ancient or Modern Greek query!

inexercitatus: Difference between revisions

From LSJ

Οὔτ' ἐν φθιμένοις οὔτ' ἐν ζωοῖσιν ἀριθμουμένη, χωρὶς δή τινα τῶνδ' ἔχουσα μοῖραν → Neither among the dead nor the living do I count myself, having a lot apart from these

Euripides, Suppliants, 968
m (Text replacement - "(?s)({{Lewis.*?}}\n)({{.*}}\n)({{LaEn.*?}}$)" to "$3 $1$2")
m (Text replacement - ":: ([a-zA-Z' ]+), ([a-zA-Z' ]+)\n" to ":: $1, $2 ")
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{LaEn
{{LaEn
|lnetxt=inexercitatus inexercitata, inexercitatum ADJ :: untrained, unpracticed
|lnetxt=inexercitatus inexercitata, inexercitatum ADJ :: [[untrained]], [[unpracticed]]
}}
}}
{{Lewis
{{Lewis

Latest revision as of 19:45, 29 November 2022

Latin > English

inexercitatus inexercitata, inexercitatum ADJ :: untrained, unpracticed

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

ĭn-exercĭtātus: a, um, adj.
I Untrained, unexercised, unpractised, unskilful (class.): rudis et inexercitatus miles, Cic. Tusc. 2, 16, 38; so, miles, Front. Strat. 2, 1, 9: homo non hebes, neque inexercitatus, Cic. de Or. 2, 17, 72: promptus et non inexercitatus ad dicendum, id. Brut. 36, 136: histriones, id. de Sen. 18, 64: copiae, Nep. Eum. 3, 3: eloquentia, Tac. Or. 5.—
II Unemployed, not busy (rare): homo, Cels. praef. fin.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

ĭnexercĭtātus,¹⁴ a, um (in, exercito),
1 qui ne fait pas d’exercice, non occupé : Cels. Med. præf. fin
2 non exercé, novice, qui n’a pas de pratique : Cic. Tusc. 2, 38 ; de Or. 2, 72 ; Br. 136 ; CM 64.

Latin > German (Georges)

in-exercitātus, a, um (in u. exercito), I) unbeschäftigt, mit körperlicher Arbeit nicht beschäftigt (Ggstz. exercitatus), homo, Cels. praef. p. 12, 25 D.: corpora, ohne Bewegung, Sen. nat. qu. 3, 19, 2. – II) ungeübt, histrio, Cic.: miles, Cic.: copiae, Nep.: homo non hebes neque inexercitatus, Cic.: diserta quidem sed inexercitata et eiusmodi certaminum rudis Helvidii sapientia, Tac. dial.: cum iidem docti facere illud, indocti inexercitatique non possimus, Quint. – mit Ang. wozu? prompti et non inexercitati ad dicendum, Cic. Brut. 136.