encaustus
From LSJ
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 (Lewis & Short)
encaustus: (encaut-), a, um, adj., = ἔγκαυστος,
I burned in, encaustic.
I Adj.: genus pingendi, the encaustic mode of painting, Plin. 35, 11, 41, § 149; cf., respecting it, O. Müller, Archäol. § 320: Phaëthon, Mart. 4, 47, 1.—
II Subst.: en-caustum (encaut-), i., n., = ἔγκαυστον, the purple-red ink of the later Roman emperors, Cod. Th. 7, 20, 1; August. contra Faust. 3, 18; Cod. Just. 1, 23, 6 al.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
encaustus, a, um (ἔγκαυστος), fait à l’encaustique : Mart. 4, 47, 1 ; Plin. 35, 149.