amaracus

From LSJ
Revision as of 13:46, 9 October 2024 by lsj>Spiros (Text replacement - "ἀμαράκινος, ἀμάρακον" to "ἀμάρακον")

μή, φίλα ψυχά, βίον ἀθάνατον σπεῦδε, τὰν δ' ἔμπρακτον ἄντλει μαχανάν → Oh! my soul do not aspire to eternal life, but exhaust the limits of the possible. | Do not yearn, O my soul, for immortal life! Use to the utmost the skill that is yours. | Do not, my soul, strive for the life of the immortals, but exhaust the practical means at your disposal.

Source

Latin > English

amaracus amaraci N C :: marjoram; feverfew (Pyrethrum parthenium)

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

ămārăcus: i, comm., and ămāră-cum, i, n., = ἀμάρακος, and -ον,
I marjoram: Origanum majorana, Linn.; Plin. 21, 11, 39, § 67; 21, 22, 93, § 163; 13, 1, 2, § 14: suave olens, Cat. 61, 7: mollis, Verg. A. 1, 693.

Latin > German (Georges)

amāracus, ī, c., u. amāracum, ī, n. (ἀμάρακος u. ον), I) Majoran (Origanum Majorana, L.), eine wohlriechende Blume, Plin. 21, 37. Verg. Aen. 1, 693: zu Kränzen gebraucht, Catull. 61, 6 sq. – II) eine Pflanze = perdicium (nach Scheller zu Cels. 2, 33. not. 320 wahrsch. Matricaria Parthenium), Plin. 21, 176.

Translations

marjoram

Arabic: مَرْدَقُوش, بَرْدَقُوش, مَرْزَنْجُوش; Armenian Middle Armenian: մարզնկօշ; Old Armenian: մարզգոշ; Bulgarian: риган; Catalan: marduix; Chinese Mandarin: 墨角蘭, 墨角兰; Czech: majoránka; Dutch: echte marjolein; Finnish: maustemeirami; French: marjolaine; German: Majoran; Greek: ματζουράνα; Ancient Greek: ἀγήρατον, ἀγριορίγανος, ἄκαπνον, ἀμάρακον, ἀμάρακος, κνήκιον, κονίλη, ὀνῖτις, σάμψουχον, σάμψυχον; Hungarian: majoránna; Hunsrik: Maairon; Ido: majorano; Irish: oragán cumhra; Italian: maggiorana; Kannada: ಮರುಗ; Korean: 마저럼; Latin: amaracus, maiorana, majorana; Macedonian: мајоран; Norman: marjolaine; Old English: cyninges wyrt, wurmille; Ottoman Turkish: ككلیك اوتی; Polish: majeranek; Portuguese: manjerona; Punjabi: ਮਰੂਆ; Romanian: maghiran; Russian: майоран; Serbo-Croatian: majòrān, majorána, màžurān, mažurána; Slovene: majaron; Spanish: mejorana, mayorana, almoraduj; Tagalog: mehorana; Turkish: mercanköşk; Welsh: penrhudd yr ardd; Yiddish: מײַראַן, מאַיאָראַן