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Tiro: Difference between revisions

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Ὀίκοι μένειν δεῖ τὸν καλῶς εὐδαίμονα → The person who is well satisfied should stay at home.

Aeschylus, fr. 317
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|Text=[[File:woodhouse_1028.jpg|thumb|link={{filepath:woodhouse_1028.jpg}}]]Τίρων, -ωνος, ὁ.
|Text=[[Τίρων]], -ωνος, ὁ.
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Latest revision as of 18:40, 19 May 2020

English > Greek (Woodhouse)

Τίρων, -ωνος, ὁ.

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

Tīro: ōnis, m.,
I a Roman proper name. So esp., M. Tullius Tiro, the learned freedman of Cicero, Cic. Fam. 16, 10; id. Att. 6, 7, 2; 9, 17, 2 (to him are addressed the letters id. Fam. 16, 3-10; 16, 12-15); Gell. 7, 3, 8; 13, 9, 1 sq.—Hence, Tīrōnĭ-ānus, a, um, adj., of or belonging to Tiro: liber, Gell. 13, 20, 16: Tironiana cura, id. 1, 7, 1.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

(2) Tīrō,¹² ōnis, m., M. Tullius Tiron [affranchi de Cicéron] : Cic. Fam. 16, 10, etc. || -rōnĭānus, a, um, Tironien, de Tiron : Gell. 13, 20, 16.