mutuo
πενία μόνα τὰς τέχνας ἐγείρει → poverty alone promotes skilled work, necessity is the mother of invention, necessity is the mother of all invention, poverty is the mother of invention, out of necessity comes invention, out of necessity came invention, frugality is the mother of invention
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
mūtŭō: adv., v. mutuus
I fin. A.
mūtŭo: āre, v. mutuor.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
(1) mūtŭō¹³ (mutuus), mutuellement, réciproquement : Planc. d. Cic. Fam. 10, 15, 4 ; Lepid. Fam. 10, 34, 3.
(2) mūtŭō, āvī, ātum, āre (mutuum), tr., emprunter de l’argent : Cæcil. d. Non. 474, 4 || [en gén.] emprunter, recevoir d’un autre : Plin. 2, 45.
Latin > German (Georges)
(1) mūtuō1, Adv. (mutuus), wechselseitig, gegenseitig, wiederum, aestus maritimi mutuo accedentes et recedentes, Cic.: vir amantissimus mihique mutuo carus, Fronto. – me m. diligas, Planc. in Cic. ep.: de se m. sentire provinciam, ebenso gegen ihn gesinnt sei, wie er gegen sie gewesen, Auct b. Alex.: officia cum multis m. exercuit, Suet.
(2) mūtuo2 (āvī), ātum, āre (mutuum), von jmd. borgen, leihen, entlehnen, ad amicos curret matuatum; mutuet meā causā, Caecil. com. 11: a quibus (a tragoedia et comoedia) forma mutuaretur, Tert. adv. Val. 10: luna mutuatā a sole luce fulget, Plin. 2, 45: u. so Partiz. Perf. passiv bei Vitr. 10, 7 (12), 4. Tort. apol. 45 u. ad nat. 2, 4. – / Val. Max. 3, 4, 2 u. Apul. met. 6, 12 jetzt das Depon. mutuor.