glomeramen

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Ἃ δέ σοι συνεχῶς παρήγγελλον, ταῦτα καὶ πρᾶττε καὶ μελέτα, στοιχεῖα τοῦ καλῶς ζῆν ταῦτ' εἶναι διαλαμβάνων (Epicurus, Letter to Menoeceus 123.2) → Carry on and practice the things I incessantly used to urge you to do, realizing that they are the essentials of a good life.

Source

Latin > English

glomeramen glomeraminis N N :: round mass, globe

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

glŏmĕrāmen: ĭnis, n. id.,
I a rounding; concr., a round body, ball (poet. and perh. ante- and post-class.): dissimiles formae glomeramen in unum conveniunt, Lucr. 2, 686: lunae, id. 5, 726.—In plur.: nec retinentur enim inter se glomeramina quaeque, i. e. the round atoms, Lucr. 2, 454: dilue praeterea glomeramina, i. e. pills, Ser. Samm. 55, 999.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

glŏmĕrāmĕn,¹⁴ ĭnis, n. (glomero), formation en pelote ; agglomération ; peloton, boule : Lucr. 2, 686 || pl., les atomes de forme sphérique : Lucr. 2, 454.

Latin > German (Georges)

glomerāmen, inis, n. (glomero), eine zusammengeballte Masse, ein geballtes Kügelchen, Lucr. 2, 686 u.a.: Plur. = runde Atome, Lucr. 2, 454; u. Pillen, Ser. Samm. 999.