bicorpor: Difference between revisions

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Ζευχθεὶς γάμοισιν οὐκέτ' ἔστ' ἐλεύθερος → Haud liber ultra est, nuptiae quem vinciunt → Wer durch der Ehe Joch vereint, ist nicht mehr frei

Menander, Monostichoi, 197
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|lnetxt=bicorpor (gen.), bicorporis ADJ :: double-bodied, having two bodies
|lnetxt=bicorpor (gen.), bicorporis ADJ :: [[double-bodied]], [[having two bodies]]
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{{Lewis

Revision as of 13:35, 14 May 2024

Latin > English

bicorpor (gen.), bicorporis ADJ :: double-bodied, having two bodies

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

bĭcorpor: ŏris, adj. bis-corpus,
I having two bodies, double-bodied (poet. and very rare; late prose form bĭcorpŏrĕ-us, Firm. Math. 2, 12): bicorpores Gigantes, Naev. Bell. Pun. 2, 14 (ap. Prisc. p. 679 P.): Pallas bicorpor, Att. ap. Prisc. p. 699 P.; and so besides only in Cic. in a transl. from Sophocl. Trachin.: manus, Tusc. 2, 9, 22.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

bĭcorpŏr, ŏris, m. et f. (bis, corpus), qui a deux corps : bicorpor manus [poet.] Cic. Tusc. 2, 22, [trad. de Sophocle] la troupe des centaures || -pŏrĕus, a, um, Firm. Math. 2, 12.

Latin > German (Georges)

bicorpor, oris (bis u. corpus; vgl. Prisc. de fig. num. 31. p. 416, 27 K.), zweileibig, doppelleibig, Pallas bicorpor, Acc. tr. 307: bicorpores Gigantes, Naev. bell. Pun. 1. fr. 18 Vahlen (b. Prisc. 6, 6): haec bicorporem afflixit manum (Schar), Cic. poët. Tusc. 2, 22. – Spät. Nbf. bicorporeus, a, um, Firm. math. 2, 12.