matricida
αἱ δὲ χολωσάμεναι πηρὸν θέσαν → but they in their wrath maimed him, but they in their wrath made him helpless, but they in their wrath made him blind
Latin > English
matricida matricidae N C :: matricide
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
mātrĭcīda: (scanned matrĭcĭda, Sid. Carm. 5, 291), ae, comm. mater-caedo,
I a mother's murderer, a matricide (rare but class.): quem scribis certissimum matricidam, Cic. Q. Fr. 1, 2, 2; Nep. Alc. 6, 2: cantavit Oresten matricidam, Suet. Ner. 21.—In tmesi: matrique cida Nero, Aus. de XII. Caes. 35 (al. matrīcīda Nero).
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
mātrĭcīda,¹⁴ æ, m. f. (mater, cædo), celui ou celle qui a tué sa mère, parricide : Cic. Har. 39 ; Q. 1, 2, 4 ; Nep. Alc. 6, 2.
Latin > German (Georges)
mātricīda, ae, m. (mater u. caedo), der Muttermörder, Cic. ad Q. fr. 1, 2, 2. Cic. de har. resp. 39. Nep. Alc. 6, 2. Suet. Ner. 21, 3. Auson. Caesares (XXI) 1, 35. p. 113 Schenkl. Vulg. 1. Tim. 1, 9 (neben patricida). – / mātrĭcĭda gemessen, Sidon. carm. 5, 290.
Latin > Chinese
matricida, ae. m. f. :: 殺母者
Translations
matricide
Armenian: մայրասպան; Czech: matkovrah; French: matricide; German: Muttermörder, Muttermörderin; Greek: μητροκτόνος; Ancient Greek: ματροφόνος, μητραλοίας, μητραλοίης, μητραλῴας, μητροκτόνος, μητρολέτης, μητρολώας, μητρολῴας, μητρορραίστης, μητροφόνος; Irish: marfóir máthar; Latin: matricida; Polish: matkobójca, matkobójczyni; Portuguese: matricida; Russian: матереубийца; Serbo-Croatian Roman: materoubica, majkoubica; Swedish: modermördare