infirme

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πενία μόνα τὰς τέχνας ἐγείρει → poverty alone promotes skilled work, necessity is the mother of invention, necessity is the mother of all invention, poverty is the mother of invention, out of necessity comes invention, out of necessity came invention, frugality is the mother of invention

Source

Latin > English

infirme ADV :: weakly, faintly; cravenly; not powerfully/effectively/dependably/soundly

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

infirmē: adv., v. infirmus.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

īnfirmē¹⁵ (infirmus), sans vigueur, faiblement : Cic. Fam. 15, 1, 3 ; Plin. Min. Ep. 1, 20, 21 || infirmius Suet. Aug. 90, avec trop de faiblesse.

Latin > German (Georges)

īnfīrmē, Adv. (infirmus), a) ohne Halt, haltlos, ieiune et infirme dicere, Plin. ep. 1, 20, 21. – b) kleinmütig, tonitrua et fulgura paulo infirmius expavescebat, Suet. Aug. 90. – c) unzuverlässig, socii inf. animati, Cic. ep. 15, 1, 3.