foramen
ἁρμονίη ἀφανὴς φανερῆς κρείττων → the hidden attunement is better than the obvious one, invisible connection is stronger than visible, harmony we can't see is stronger than harmony we can, unseen harmony is stronger than what we can see
Latin > English
foramen foraminis N N :: hole, aperture; fissure
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
fŏrāmen: ĭnis, n. id.,
I an opening or aperture produced by boring, a hole (rare but class.): neque porta neque ullum foramen erat, qua posset eruptio fieri, outlet, Sisenn. ap. Non. 113, 27: foramina parietum et fenestrarum, Col. 9, 15, 10: inventa sunt in eo (scuto) foramina CCXXX., * Caes. B. C. 3, 53, 4: tibia tenuis simplexque foramine pauco, Hor. A. P. 203; Ov. M. 4, 122: alii (scarabei) focos crebris foraminibus excavant, Plin. 11, 28, 34, § 98: foramina illa, quae patent ad animum a corpore (shortly before, viae quasi quaedam sunt ad oculos, ad aures perforatae; and: quasi fenestrae sint animi), * Cic. Tusc. 1, 20, 47. —
II Transf. in gen., an opening, hole, cave (late Lat.): petrae, Vulg. Exod. 33, 22; id. Jer. 13, 4.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
fŏrāmĕn,¹⁰ ĭnis, n. (foro), trou, ouverture : Sisenna d. Non. 113, 27 ; Cic. Tusc. 1, 47 ; Cæs. C. 3, 53, 4 ; tibia foramine pauco Hor. P. 203, la flûte à peu de trous.
Latin > German (Georges)
forāmen, inis, n. (foro), jede natürliche od. durch Kunst gebildete Öffnung, der Gang, Zugang, das Loch, a) von Natur: profundum terrae f., Iustin.: foramina terrae, Lucr. u. Ov.: per ea foramina extrahitur piscis, Mela. – im Körper, for. auris, Gehörgang, Cels.: foramina intra caput maxima oculorum sunt, Cels.: foramina illa, quae patent ad animum a corpore, Cic.: oculi eius contabescent in foraminibus suis (in ihren Höhlen), Vulg. – b) durch Kunst, for. acus, Nadelöhr, Vulg. Matth. 19, 24 u. Augustin. epist. 130, 2: for. trochleae, der Haken od. Ring eines Klobens, Vitr.: for. valvae, Petron.: operculi foramina, Liv.: parietum et fenestrarum foramina, Col.: convexa foramina retis, Ov.: tibia foramine pauco, mit wenig Löchern, Hor. terebrā foramen facere, cavare, Cels. u. Col.: prolabi in cloacae foramen, Suet.: foramine e terra emergere, Vell.: inventa in eo (scuto) foramina CXX, Caes.: neque porta neque ullum foramen erat, Sisenn. fr.: foraminibus et rimis aurem admovent, sie legen ihr Ohr an die Öffnungen (der durchbrochenen Felderdecke) u. Ritze, Tac.
Translations
hole
Adyghe: абан, гъуанэ; Albanian: vrimë; Aleut: hunax̂, tatax̂; Apache Western Apache: o'i'án; Arabic: ثَقْب, حُفْرة; Egyptian Arabic: حرق, خرم; Hijazi Arabic: خُرْق, خُرْم, فَتْحة, حُفرة, ثُقْب; South Levantine Arabic: خرم, خزق; Aragonese: forau; Armenian: անցք, ծակ; Aromanian: gavrã, guvã; Assamese: গাঁত, ফুটা; Asturian: furacu, buracu, fueyu; Azerbaijani: deşik, dəlik; Bashkir: батынҡы урын, соҡор; Belarusian: дзі́рка; Bengali: গর্ত; Bulgarian: дупка, яма; Burmese: တွင်း; Catalan: forat; Chechen: ӏуьрг; Cherokee: ᎠᏔᎴᏒᎢ; Chinese Cantonese: 窿; Mandarin: 孔, 洞, 穴; Corsican: tufone; Crimean Tatar: teşik; Czech: díra; Danish: hul; Dutch: gaatje, gat, holletje, opening; Erzya: варя; Esperanto: truo; Estonian: auk; Evenki: саңар; Faroese: hol; Finnish: kuoppa, kolo; French: creux, trou; Galician: burato, buraco, pía, foca; Georgian: ნახვრეტი, ხვრელი; German: Loch, Grube, Grübchen, Mulde, Vertiefung, Kerbe; Greek: τρύπα, οπή; Ancient Greek: ὀπή, τρύπη, τρύπημα, βόθρος; Greenlandic: putu; Hebrew: חור \ חֹר; Hindi: छेद, छिद्र; Hungarian: lyuk; Icelandic: hola; Ido: truo; Ilocano: abut; Indonesian: lubang; Ingrian: reikä, uuttu; Ingush: ӏург; Irish: poll; Italian: buco, pertugio, foro, cunicolo, fessura; Japanese: 穴; Kapampangan: busbus; Karachay-Balkar: тешик; Karaim: tiešik; Kaurna: yapa; Kazakh: тесік, жыртық; Khakas: тизік; Khmer: រូង, រន្ធ; Kikuyu: irima; Korean: 구멍; Kumyk: тешик; Kurdish Central Kurdish: چاڵ; Northern Kurdish: kun; Kyrgyz: тешик; Lao: ຂຸມ, ຮູ; Latin: cavum, foramen, fovea, lacuna; Latvian: bedre, dobums; Lingala: libúlú; Lithuanian: duobė; Lombard: bus; Macedonian: дупка; Malay: lubang; Malayalam: തുള, ദ്വാരം, ഓട്ട, സുഷിരം; Manx: towl; Maori: poka; Mongolian: нүх; Nanai: сангар; Nogai: тесик; Norwegian: hull; Occitan: trauc; Odia: ଛିଦ୍ର; Old Church Slavonic Cyrillic: дира; Old Prussian: prālī; Pashto: سورى, بغره, غار, منفذ; Persian: سوراخ; Plautdietsch: Loch; Polish: dziura; Portuguese: buraco, oco; Punjabi: ਮੋਰੀ, ਮੋਰਾ; Quechua: t'uqu; Romanian: gaură; Russian: впадина, яма; Samoan: lua; Saterland Frisian: Gat; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: отвор, рупа; Roman: otvor, rupa; Shor: тежик; Sicilian: pirtusu, purtusu, bucu; Skolt Sami: kååʹpp; Slovak: diera; Slovene: luknja; Southern Altai: тежик; Spanish: agujero, hoyo, abolladura, hendidura, depresión, pozo; Swedish: hål; Tagalog: butas; Tajik: сурох; Tamil: ஓட்டை; Tatar: чокыр, батынкылык; Thai: หลุม, รู; Tibetan: ཁུང་བུ, ས་དོང; Tocharian B: kāre; Tofa: дэлік; Turkish: delik; Turkmen: deşik; Tuvan: дежик; Ukrainian: ді́рка; Urdu: چھید; Urum: тэшик; Uyghur: تۆشۈك; Uzbek: teshik, tuynuk; Venetian: bus; Vietnamese: lỗ; Vilamovian: łöch; Volapük: hog; White Hmong: qhov; Yakut: хайаҕас; Yiddish: לאָך; Zazaki: qul; Zhuang: congh