Ask at the forum if you have an Ancient or Modern Greek query!

caementarius: Difference between revisions

From LSJ

Sunt verba voces quibus hunc lenire dolorem possis, magnam morbi deponere partem → Words will avail the wretched mind to ease and much abate the dismal black disease.

Horace, Epistles 1.34
(D_2)
(3_2)
Line 4: Line 4:
{{Gaffiot
{{Gaffiot
|gf=<b>cæmentārĭus</b>, ĭī, m. (cæmentum), maçon : Hier. Ep. 53, 6.
|gf=<b>cæmentārĭus</b>, ĭī, m. (cæmentum), maçon : Hier. Ep. 53, 6.
}}
{{Georges
|georg=caementārius, ī, m. ([[caementum]]), der [[Steinhauer]], Steinmetz, [[Maurer]], Hier. ep. 53, 6. Vulg. Amos 7, 7 u.a.
}}
}}

Revision as of 09:17, 15 August 2017

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

caementārĭus: ii, m. caementum,
I a stone-cutter, a mason, a builder of walls, Hier. Ep. 53, 6; Vulg. Amos, 7, 7.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

cæmentārĭus, ĭī, m. (cæmentum), maçon : Hier. Ep. 53, 6.

Latin > German (Georges)

caementārius, ī, m. (caementum), der Steinhauer, Steinmetz, Maurer, Hier. ep. 53, 6. Vulg. Amos 7, 7 u.a.