alimonia
οἵτινες πόλιν μίαν λαβόντες εὐρυπρωκτότεροι πολύ τῆς πόλεος ἀπεχώρησαν ἧς εἷλον τότε → after taking a single city they returned home, with arses much wider than the city they captured
Latin > English
alimonia alimoniae N F :: food, nourishment; feeding, nurture, upbringing; cost of maintenance
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
ălĭmōnĭa: ae, f. alo (ante- and postclass. for alimentum),
I nourishment, food, sustenance, support: quaestus alimoniae, Plaut. Pers. 1, 2, 1: naturalis, Gell. 17, 15, 5: flammae, fuel, Prud. Cath. 5, 19; App. M. 2, p. 115: in alimoniam ignis, for the food of the burnt-offering, Vulg. Lev. 3, 16; ib. 1 Macc. 14, 10.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
ălĭmōnĭa, æ, f., et ălĭmōnĭum, ĭī, n., nourriture, aliment : Varro Men. 260 ; Gell. 17, 15, 5 || Varro R. 3, 16, 15, etc. ; Tac. Ann. 11, 16.
Latin > German (Georges)
alimōnia, ae, f. (alo), die Ernährung, der Unterhalt, Varr. sat. Men. 260. Gell. 17, 15, 5. Prud. cathem. 5, 19 u.a. Spät. (s. Bünem. Lact. 7, 4, 7. Hildebr. Apul. met. 5, 18. Rönsch Itala p. 28): Plur., Apul. met. 2, 3; apol. 85. Cod. Theod. 12, 12, 2. – / Nicht mehr Plaut. Pers. 53.