cochlear

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νεκρὸν ἐάν ποτ' ἴδηις καὶ μνήματα κωφὰ παράγηις κοινὸν ἔσοπτρον ὁρᾶις· ὁ θανὼν οὕτως προσεδόκα → whenever you see a body dead, or pass by silent tombs, you look into the mirror of all men's destiny: the dead man expected nothing else | if you ever see a corpse or walk by quiet graves, that's when you look into the mirror we all share: the dead expected this

Source

Latin > English

cochlear cochlearis N N :: spoon; (originally for extracting snails); spoonful

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

cō̆chlĕar: cochleatus, etc., v. cocl.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

cŏchlĕăr, Cels. Med. 6, 14, et cŏchlĕāre, is, n., Mart. 14, 121, 2, (ou cocl-), cuiller || cuillerée, mesure pour les liquides : Col. Rust. 12, 21, 3.

Latin > German (Georges)

cochlear (coclear), āris (Nbf. cochleāre od. cocleāre, is, b. Mart. 8, 33, 24 u. ö. Apic. 2, 48 u. 3, 105), n. (cochlea, von der Gestalt des Schneckenhauses), I) der Löffel, Cels., Col. u.a. – II) übtr., als Maß für Flüssigkeiten, bes. in der Medizin, der Eßlöffel, Col. u. Plin.