Cornelius

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Θεὸν ἐπιορκῶν μὴ δόκει λεληθέναι → Deum latere ne putes, quod peieras → Nie, glaub's nur, bleibt vor Gott ein Meineid unbemerkt

Menander, Monostichoi, 253

English > Greek (Woodhouse)

woodhouse 1007.jpg

Κορνήλιος, ὁ.

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

Cornēlĭus: a,
I subst., a designation of a Roman gens celebrated as embracing the most distinguished Roman men and women (the patrician Scipios, Sulla, the Gracchi and their mother, etc.; the plebeian Balbi, Mammulae, Merulae, etc.).—Also adj.; hence the numerous laws made by the different Cornelii, but esp. by L. Cornelius Sulla, were called Leges Corneliae; cf. Ernest. and Orell. Clav. Cicer. in Ind. Legum, p. 13 sq.; Dict. of Antiq.—Fŏrum Cor-nēlĭum, a town of the Lingones in Gallia Cisalpina, Cic. Fam. 12, 5, 2.—Hence,
II Cornēlĭānus, a, um, adj., of or belonging to a Cornelius, Cornelian: oratio, the oration of Cicero in defence of a certain C. Cornelius, Cic. Brut. 78, 271; id. Or. 29, 103; 67, 225; 70, 232; its fragments, v. in Orell. IV. 2, pp. 446-454, and V. 2, pp. 56-81.—
   B Cornēlĭāna Castra, a place on the African coast, in the vicinity of Bagradas, named after the camp of the elder Scipio pitched there in the second Punic war, now Ghellah, Caes. B. C. 2, 24 sq.; the same place was also called Castra Cornēlĭa, Mel. 1, 7, 2; Plin. 5, 4, 3, §§ 24 and 29.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

(1) Cornēlĭus,⁸ ĭī, m., nom d’une gens ayant de nombreux rameaux, v. Dolabella, Scipio, Sylla, etc.