uterus

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πεινῶσαν ἀλώπεκα ὕπνος ἐπέρχεται → sleep allows one to go without food

Source

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

ŭtĕrus: i, m. (collat. form ŭter, Caecil. ap. Non. 188, 15;
I neutr. collat. form ŭtĕ-rum, i, Plaut. Aul. 4, 7, 10, acc. to Non. 229, 33; Turp. and Afran. ib.) [Sanscr. uttara, later; Gr. ὕστερος; cf. Gr. ὑστέρα, womb; Sanscr. udaram, belly; Engl. udder, the womb, matrix (syn. volva).
I Lit.: utero exorti dolores, Plaut. Am. 5, 1, 40: perii, mea nutrix, uterum dolet! id. Aul. 4, 7, 10; id. Truc. 1, 2, 96: quae te beluam ex utero, non hominem fudit, Cic. Fragm. ap. Serv. Verg. A. 8, 139; Plaut. Truc. 1, 2, 97; Hirt. ap. Quint. 8, 3, 54; Prop. 4, 1, 100; Hor. C. 3, 22, 2; Ov. M. 9, 280; 9, 315; 10, 495; id. F. 2, 452; Tac. A. 1, 59; Plin. 9, 6, 5, § 13.—
II Transf.
   A Of the cavities of the earth, from which the first creatures are represented to have come forth, Lucr. 5, 806; cf. Lact. 2, 11 init.—
   B The fruit of the womb, a fetus, child, young: feminae uterum gerentes, i. e. pregnant, Cels. 2, 10; Tac. A. 1, 59.—Of animals, Varr. R. R. 2, 2, 14; Plin. 8, 40, 62, § 151.—
   C In gen., the belly, paunch: me puero uterus erat solarium: ubi iste monebat esse, etc., Plaut. Fragm. ap. Gell. 3, 3, 5; Verg. A. 7, 499; Cels. 4, 1; Juv. 10, 309; Luc. 6, 115; 9, 773.— Of swans, Plin. 10, 47, 66, § 131.—
   2    Of inanimate things; of the Trojan horse, Verg. A. 2, 52: dolii, Col. 12, 4, 5: lato utero (navium), Tac. A. 2, 6.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

ŭtĕrus,¹⁰ ī, m.,
1 sein ou ventre de la mère, utérus : Pl. Truc. 200, etc. ; Hor. O. 3, 22, 2 ; Prop. 4, 1, 100 ; Ov. M. 9, 280, etc. ; Plin. 9, 13 || sein de la terre : Lucr. 5, 806
2 fruit de la femme, enfant dans le sein de sa mère : Cels. Med. 2, 10 ; Tac. Ann. 1, 59 || [fruit des animaux] ventrée : Varro R. 2, 2, 14 ; Plin. 8, 151
3 ventre, flanc d’un animal : Virg. En. 7, 499 || flanc d’un navire : Tac. Ann. 2, 6 ; [d’un tonneau] Col. Rust. 12, 4, 5 ; [du cheval de Troie] Virg. En. 2, 52.

Latin > German (Georges)

uterus, ī, m. (zu altind. udáram, Bauch), I) der Leib, Unterleib, Bauch, 1) im allg., Plaut. u. Verg. – 2) insbes., der Mutterleib, die Gebärmutter, bei Menschen u. Tieren, Plaut., Cic., Varro u.a.: tumor uteri, dicker Leib, Hieron.: uterus matris, Cels.: uterus maternus, Sen.: uterus uxoris, Tac.: onus od. pondus uteri, die Leibesfrucht, Ov. u. Prop.: uterus gravis, Ov.: laborantes utero puellae, Hor.: diva potens uteri, die Geburtsgöttin, Ov.: uterum gerere, schwanger sein, Cels., od. (v. Tieren) trächtig sein, Plin.: quae (animalia) ut sunt ex utero edita, Lact.: duodecennis filia ab utero (vom M. an) muta, Sulp. Sev.: quae te beluam ex utero, non hominem fudit, Cic. fr. – Meton.: a) die Geburt, das Gebären, uno utero, ICt.: facilior, der Tiere, Plin. – b) die Erdhüllen, aus denen die ersten Geschöpfe entsprossen sein sollten, Lucr. 5, 805; vgl. Lact. 2, 11 in. – II) übtr., der Bauch = das Innere, zB. des Fasses, Colum.: des Schiffes, Tac.: des trojanischen Pferdes, Verg. – / a) uterum, ī, n. = uterus, Turpil. com. 179. Afran. com. 346. Plaut. aul. 691. Gell. 3, 16, 1. – b) uter = uterus, Caecil. com. 94; vgl. Exc. ex Charis. art. gramm. 540, 13 u. Gloss. II, 261, 45 ›uter, γαστήρ‹.

Latin > English

uterus uteri N M :: womb; belly, abdomen

Translations

Afrikaans: baarmoeder; Albanian: an, mitër; Arabic: رَحِم‎, بَيْت الْوَلِد‎; Moroccan Arabic: والدة‎; Armenian: արգանդ; Asturian: úteru; Azerbaijani: uşaqlıq, bətn; Belarusian: матка, чэ́рава; Bengali: জরায়ু; Breton: mamm; Bulgarian: матка, утроба; Burmese: သားအိမ်; Catalan: úter, matriu; Central Melanau: peranakan; Chinese Cantonese: 子宮, 子宫; Mandarin: 子宮, 子宫; Min Nan: 子宮, 子宫, 生囝袋; Classical Nahuatl: nānyōtl; Czech: děloha; Danish: livmoder; Dhivehi: ރަހިމު‎; Dutch: baarmoeder; Elfdalian: livmųoðer; Esperanto: utero; Estonian: emakas; Faroese: lívmóðir; Finnish: kohtu; French: utérus, ventre, matrice, sein, entrailles; Galician: útero, madre, ventre, seo, entrañas; Georgian: საშვილოსნოს; German: Gebärmutter; Uterus; Mutterleib, Schoß; Gothic: 𐍅𐌰𐌼𐌱𐌰, 𐌺𐌹𐌻𐌸𐌴𐌹; Greek: μήτρα; Ancient Greek: μήτρα, ὑστέρα, δελφύς; Greenlandic: illiaq; Guaraní: ye; Gujarati: ગર્ભાશય; Hebrew: רֶחֶם \ רַחַם‎; Hindi: गर्भ, गर्भाशय; Hungarian: méh; Icelandic: leg, móðurlíf; Indonesian: rahim; Interlingua: utero, matrice; Irish: broinn; Italian: utero, grembo; Japanese: 子宮, 母胎; Kannada: ಗರ್ಭಕೋಶ; Kazakh: жатыр; Khmer: ស្បូន; Korean: 자궁(子宮); Kurdish Central Kurdish: مِناڵدان‎; Northern Kurdish: malzarok; Kyrgyz: жатын; Lao: ມົດລູກ; Latin: matrix, uterus, uterum; Latvian: dzemde; Lithuanian: gimda; Luxembourgish: Matrice, Gebärmutter, Uterus; Macedonian: матка, утроба; Malagasy: bobo, fananahana, vohoka; Malay: rahim, peranakan, kandung, kandungan, uterus; Malayalam: ഗര്‍ഭപാത്രം; Maltese: ġuf; Manx: brein; Maori: wharekano, wharekākano, wharetangata; Marathi: गर्भाशय; Middle English: matrice, maris, wombe; Mongolian: сав, умай, хэвлий; Navajo: iishchʼid; Nepali: पाठेघर; Norwegian Bokmål: livmor; Nynorsk: livmor; Old Church Slavonic Cyrillic: чрѣво; Old East Slavic: черево; Old English: innoþ, cwiþ, hrif, ċildhama; Pashto: رحم‎, توملنه‎, زيلان‎; Persian: رحم‎, زهدان‎, زاقدان‎; Polish: macica; Portuguese: útero, matriz; Quechua: kisma; Romanian: uter, matcă; Romansch: madra, uterus; Russian: матка, утроба, чрево; Rusyn: матка; Sami Inari: kuáhtu; Northern: mánágoahti, eatniheagga, goaŧŧu; Skolt: vuõbdd; Southern: boernesgåetie, jiemie; Sanskrit: गर्भ; Scottish Gaelic: machlag, broinn, brù; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: матерница, материца, утроба; Roman: maternica, materica, utroba; Slovak: maternica; Slovene: maternica; Sorbian Upper Sorbian: maćernica, rodźeńca; Spanish: útero, matriz; Sranan Tongo: bere; Sundanese: ᮕᮤᮃᮔᮊᮔ᮪; Swahili: nyumba ya uzazi, tumbo; Swedish: livmoder; Tagalog: bahay-bata, sinapupunan, matris, utero; Tajik: бачадон, раҳим, заҳдон; Tamil: கருப்பை; Telugu: గర్భం, గర్భాశయము; Thai: มดลูก; Tocharian B: kaläl, kātso; Tupinambá: ygé; Turkish: rahim, dölyatağı, uterus; Turkmen: ýatgy; Ugaritic: 𐎗𐎈𐎎; Ukrainian: матка, утроба, черево; Urdu: گربھ‎, رحم‎; Uyghur: بەچىدان‎, قارىن‎, ماتكا‎; Uzbek: bachadon, matka; Venetian: mare; Vietnamese: tử cung, dạ con; Volapük: vüm, motavüm; Welsh: croth; Old Welsh: gumbelauc; Yiddish: טראַכט‎, מוטערטראַכט‎, הייבמוטער‎