morosus: Difference between revisions

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δὶς ἐξαμαρτεῖν ταὐτὸν οὐκ ἀνδρὸς σοφοῦ → a wise man should not keep making the same mistake, a wise man should not repeat the same mistake, doing twice the same mistake is not a wise man's doing, making the same mistake twice does not befit the wise, making the same mistake twice does not belong to a man who is wise, making the same mistake twice does not belong to a wise man, the wise man does not make the same mistake twice, to commit the same sin twice is not a sign of a wise man, it is unwise to err twice

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|gf=(1) <b>mōrōsus</b>,¹² a, um ([[mos]]),<br /><b>1</b> [[morose]], dont l’humeur [[est]] [[difficile]] : Cic. CM 65 ; Hor. O. 1, 9, 17 || [[difficile]], exigeant, maussade : Cic. Or. 104 ; -ior Suet. Cæs. 45<br /><b>2</b> [en parl. des choses] [[difficile]], pénible : Plin. 16, 139 ; Ov. Ars 2, 323.<br />(2) <b>mŏrōsus</b>, a, um (mŏra), lent : Cassian. Coll. 17, 5.
|gf=(1) <b>mōrōsus</b>,¹² a, um ([[mos]]),<br /><b>1</b> [[morose]], dont l’humeur [[est]] [[difficile]] : Cic. CM 65 ; Hor. O. 1, 9, 17 &#124;&#124; [[difficile]], exigeant, maussade : Cic. Or. 104 ; -ior Suet. Cæs. 45<br /><b>2</b> [en parl. des choses] [[difficile]], pénible : Plin. 16, 139 ; Ov. Ars 2, 323.<br />(2) <b>mŏrōsus</b>, a, um (mŏra), lent : Cassian. Coll. 17, 5.||[[difficile]], exigeant, maussade : Cic. Or. 104 ; -ior Suet. Cæs. 45<br /><b>2</b> [en parl. des choses] [[difficile]], pénible : Plin. 16, 139 ; Ov. Ars 2, 323.<br />(2) <b>mŏrōsus</b>, a, um (mŏra), lent : Cassian. Coll. 17, 5.
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Revision as of 07:33, 14 August 2017

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

mŏrōsus: a, um, adj. mora,
I lingering, slow, slow in coming (lato Lat.): cui morosum videtur quodcunque futurum est, Cassiod. in Psa. 34, 20: iter fieri morosum quod ad celeritatem est inventum, id. Var. 1, 29.
mōrōsus: a, um, adj. mos; cf. Cic. Tusc. 4, 24, 54,
I peevish, fretful, wayward, capricious, captious, morose (syn.: tristis, severus, gravis, difficilis; class.): usque eo difficiles ac morosi sumus, ut nobis non satisfaciat ipse Demosthenes, Cic. Or. 29, 104: at sunt morosi et anxii, et iracundi et difficiles senes, id. Sen. 18, 65: canities, Hor. C. 1, 9, 17.—Of excessive care: circa corporis curam morosior, particular, fastidious, Suet. Caes. 45.—Of things concr. and abstr.: cupressus natu morosa, that grows with difficulty, Plin. 16, 33, 60, § 139: morbus, stubborn, Ov. A. A. 2, 323: caelandi subtilitas, anxious, painful, Plin. 35, prooem. § 1: si tibi morosa prurigine verminat auris, Mart. 14, 23.—Hence, adv.: mōrōsē.
   1    Peevishly, fretfully, captiously, morosely (class.): morose ferre hominum ineptias, Cic. Brut. 67, 236.—
   2    Scrupulously, carefully: terram non morose legit, Plin. 18, 13, 34, § 128. —Comp.: pallium morosius ordinatum, Tert. Pall. 4.—Sup.: morosissime, Suet. Aug. 66.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

(1) mōrōsus,¹² a, um (mos),
1 morose, dont l’humeur est difficile : Cic. CM 65 ; Hor. O. 1, 9, 17 || difficile, exigeant, maussade : Cic. Or. 104 ; -ior Suet. Cæs. 45
2 [en parl. des choses] difficile, pénible : Plin. 16, 139 ; Ov. Ars 2, 323.
(2) mŏrōsus, a, um (mŏra), lent : Cassian. Coll. 17, 5.