infense: Difference between revisions
From LSJ
(D_5) |
(3_7) |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
{{Gaffiot | {{Gaffiot | ||
|gf=<b>īnfēnsē</b>¹⁴ ([[infensus]]), en ennemi, d’une manière hostile : Tac. Ann. 5, 3 ; infensius Cic. Or. 172. | |gf=<b>īnfēnsē</b>¹⁴ ([[infensus]]), en ennemi, d’une manière hostile : Tac. Ann. 5, 3 ; infensius Cic. Or. 172. | ||
}} | |||
{{Georges | |||
|georg=īnfēnsē, Adv. ([[infensus]]), erbittert, [[gehässig]], [[feindselig]], [[infense]] [[invectus]], Tac. ann. 5, 3. – infensius [[pro]] [[vallo]] pugnare, Liv. 34, 15, 5: [[quis]] Isocrati est [[adversatus]] infensius? Cic. or. 172: [[tanto]] infensius caesi, [[quanto]] etc., Tac. ann. 4, 81: infensius loqui, Tac. hist. 3, 24. | |||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 09:26, 15 August 2017
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
infensē: adv., v. infensus.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
īnfēnsē¹⁴ (infensus), en ennemi, d’une manière hostile : Tac. Ann. 5, 3 ; infensius Cic. Or. 172.
Latin > German (Georges)
īnfēnsē, Adv. (infensus), erbittert, gehässig, feindselig, infense invectus, Tac. ann. 5, 3. – infensius pro vallo pugnare, Liv. 34, 15, 5: quis Isocrati est adversatus infensius? Cic. or. 172: tanto infensius caesi, quanto etc., Tac. ann. 4, 81: infensius loqui, Tac. hist. 3, 24.