immansuetus
ἀλλ’ οὔτε πολλὰ τραύματ’ ἐν στέρνοις λαβὼν θνῄσκει τις, εἰ μὴ τέρμα συντρέχοι βίου, οὔτ’ ἐν στέγῃ τις ἥμενος παρ’ ἑστίᾳ φεύγει τι μᾶλλον τὸν πεπρωμένον μόρον → But a man will not die, even though he has been wounded repeatedly in the chest, should the appointed end of his life not have caught up with him; nor can one who sits beside his hearth at home escape his destined death any the more
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
immansuētus: (inm-), a, um, adj. in-mansuetus,
I untamed, wild, savage (poet. and in post-Aug. prose): ille ferox immansuetusque, Ov. M. 4, 237: Cyclops, id. ib. 14, 249: at tu (Borea), de rapidis immansuetissime ventis, id. H. 18, 37: trucem atque immansuetum bovem caedimus, Sen. de Ira, 1, 15: ingenium immansuetum ferumque, Ov. M. 15, 85: quid immansuetius? Sen. Cons. ad Helv. 6.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
immānsuētus,¹³ a, um (in, mansuetus), sauvage, cruel, féroce : Ov. M. 4, 237 ; Sen. Helv. 6, 5 ; Ira 1, 15.
Latin > German (Georges)
im-mānsuētus, a, um, Adv. (in u. mansuetus), ungezähmt, unbändig, wild, bos, Sen.: gens, ungebildet, Cic.: ingenium, Ov.: quid immansuetius? Sen. ad Helv. 6, 5: ventus immansuetissimus, Ov. her. 17 (18), 37.