effrenatus: Difference between revisions

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Λύπης ἰατρός ἐστιν ἀνθρώποις λόγος – For men reason is a healer of grief – Für Menschen ist der Trauer Arzt allein das WortMaeroris unica medicina oratio.

Menander, Sententiae, 452
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{{trml
{{trml
|trtx====[[unbridled]]===
|trtx====[[unbridled]]===
Armenian: սանձարձակ; Azerbaijani: yüyənsiz; Bulgarian: без юзда; French: [[débridé]]; German: [[ungezäumt]]; Greek: [[αχαλίνωτος]]; Ancient Greek: [[ἀχάλινος]], [[ἀχαλίνωτος]], [[ἀχαλιναγώγητος]]; Latin: [[effrenatus]]; Russian: [[разнузданный]]
Armenian: սանձարձակ; Azerbaijani: yüyənsiz; Bulgarian: без юзда; French: [[débridé]]; German: [[ungezäumt]]; Greek: [[αχαλίνωτος]]; Ancient Greek: [[ἀνήνιος]], [[ἀχάλινος]], [[ἀχαλίνωτος]], [[ἀχαλιναγώγητος]]; Latin: [[effrenatus]]; Russian: [[разнузданный]]
}}
}}

Revision as of 08:15, 27 May 2024

Latin > English

effrenatus effrenata, effrenatum ADJ :: unbridled; unrestrained, unruly, headstrong, violent; freed from/not subject to

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

effrēnātus: a, um, Part. and P. a., from effreno.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

effrēnātus,¹¹ a, um, part. adj. de effreno, débridé, délivré du frein : Liv. 40, 40, 5 || [fig.] qui n’a plus de frein, effréné, désordonné, déréglé, déchaîné : effrenata libido Cic. Clu. 15, passion déchaînée ; secundis rebus effrenatus Cic. Off. 1, 90, à qui le bonheur a fait perdre le sens de la mesure || -natior Cic. de Or. 3, 205 ; -tissimus Sen. Ep. 88, 19.

Latin > German (Georges)

effrēnātus (ecfrēnātus), a, um, Adi. m. Compar. u. Superl. (ex u. frenum), entzäumt, zaumlos, I) eig.: equi, Liv. 40, 40, 5: equi velut effrenati passim incerto cursu feruntur, Liv. 37, 41, 10. – II) übtr., zügellos, entfesselt, unbändig, ungezähmt, furor, cupiditas, homo, Cic.: homines effrenatae lubidinis, Sall. fr.: effrenata insolentiā multitudo, Cic.: effrenatior vox, Cic.: effrenatissimi affectus, Sen.

Translations

unbridled

Armenian: սանձարձակ; Azerbaijani: yüyənsiz; Bulgarian: без юзда; French: débridé; German: ungezäumt; Greek: αχαλίνωτος; Ancient Greek: ἀνήνιος, ἀχάλινος, ἀχαλίνωτος, ἀχαλιναγώγητος; Latin: effrenatus; Russian: разнузданный