dementio
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
Latin > English
dementio dementire, -, - V INTRANS :: become deranged; lose one's readon; be mad, rave
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
dēmentĭo: īre, 4, v. n. id.,
I to be out of one's senses, to be mad, to rave (anteand post-class.): dementit deliraque fatur, * Lucr. 3, 464: sese mea magia in amorem inductam dementire, App. Mag. p. 324, 9: aliquis instinctu daemonis percitus dementit, effertur, insanit, Lact. 4, 27 med.>
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
dēmentĭō,¹⁶ īre (demens), intr., perdre la raison, être en démence, délirer : Lucr. 3, 464 ; Lact. Inst. 4, 27, 12.
Latin > German (Georges)
dēmentio, īre (demens) = ἀφρονέω, nicht recht bei Sinnen sein, verrückt sein, sich unsinnig gebaren, Lucr. 3, 464. Apul. apol. 45 u. 78. Lact. 4, 27, 12. Mart. Cap. 8. § 106.