harenosus
ἡδονήν, μέγιστον κακοῦ δέλεαρ → pleasure, the greatest incitement to evildoing | pleasure, a most mighty lure to evil | pleasure, the great bait to evil
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
hărēnōsus: (aren-), a, um, adj. harena,
I full of sand, sandy: Ladon, Ov. M. 1, 702: terra, id. ib. 14, 82; Plin. 17, 7, 4, § 44: litus Libyae, Verg. A. 4, 257: urina, Plin. 23, 3, 36, § 73: lapis harenosior, id. 33, 6, 33, § 101: quod sit harenosissimum subsidat, id. 27, 4, 5, § 20.—As subst.: hărē-nōsum, i, n., a sandy place: quae humi arido atque harenoso gignuntur, Sall. J. 48, 3.—Plur.: hărēnōsa, ōrum, opp. lutosa, Plin. 32, 6, 21, § 60.
Latin > English
harenosus harenosa, harenosum ADJ :: sandy, containing sand (ground)
Translations
Aromanian: arinos; Azerbaijani: qumlu; Bulgarian: песъчлив; Catalan: sorrenc; Danish: sandet; Dutch: zanderig; Esperanto: sabla; Finnish: hiekkainen; Galician: areoso; German: sandig; Greek: αμμώδης; Ancient Greek: ἀμαθῶδες, ἀμαθώδης, ἄμμινος, ἀμμόγειος, ἀμμοφανής, ἀμμόχωστος, ἀμμῶδες, ἀμμώδης, ἀσώδης, δίαμμος, εὐψάμαθος, ἔφαμμος, ἠμαθόεις, θινῶδες, θινώδης, πολύαμμος, πολυψάμαθος, ὑπόψαμμος, ὕφαμμος, ψαμαθηΐς, ψαμαθῶδες, ψαμαθώδης, ψαμμαῖος, ψάμμινος, ψαμμόγεως, ψαμμοειδής, ψαμμῶδες, ψαμμώδης; Gujarati: રેતાળ; Icelandic: sendinn; Ido: sabloza; Latin: harenosus; Latvian: smilšains; Lithuanian: smėlėtas; Macedonian: песочен; Nogai: кумлы; Polish: piaszczysty; Portuguese: areado, arenado; Romanian: nisipos, arinos; Spanish: arenoso; Swedish: sandig; Turkish: kumlu; Ukrainian: піщаний; Yiddish: זאַמדיק