foramen

From LSJ

Ὁπόσον τῷ ποδὶ περρέχει τᾶς γᾶς, τοῦτο χάρις → Every inch of his stature is grace

Theocritus, Idylls, 30.3

Latin > English

foramen foraminis N N :: hole, aperture; fissure

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

fŏrāmen: ĭnis, n. id.,
I an opening or aperture produced by boring, a hole (rare but class.): neque porta neque ullum foramen erat, qua posset eruptio fieri, outlet, Sisenn. ap. Non. 113, 27: foramina parietum et fenestrarum, Col. 9, 15, 10: inventa sunt in eo (scuto) foramina CCXXX., * Caes. B. C. 3, 53, 4: tibia tenuis simplexque foramine pauco, Hor. A. P. 203; Ov. M. 4, 122: alii (scarabei) focos crebris foraminibus excavant, Plin. 11, 28, 34, § 98: foramina illa, quae patent ad animum a corpore (shortly before, viae quasi quaedam sunt ad oculos, ad aures perforatae; and: quasi fenestrae sint animi), * Cic. Tusc. 1, 20, 47. —
II Transf. in gen., an opening, hole, cave (late Lat.): petrae, Vulg. Exod. 33, 22; id. Jer. 13, 4.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

fŏrāmĕn,¹⁰ ĭnis, n. (foro), trou, ouverture : Sisenna d. Non. 113, 27 ; Cic. Tusc. 1, 47 ; Cæs. C. 3, 53, 4 ; tibia foramine pauco Hor. P. 203, la flûte à peu de trous.

Latin > German (Georges)

forāmen, inis, n. (foro), jede natürliche od. durch Kunst gebildete Öffnung, der Gang, Zugang, das Loch, a) von Natur: profundum terrae f., Iustin.: foramina terrae, Lucr. u. Ov.: per ea foramina extrahitur piscis, Mela. – im Körper, for. auris, Gehörgang, Cels.: foramina intra caput maxima oculorum sunt, Cels.: foramina illa, quae patent ad animum a corpore, Cic.: oculi eius contabescent in foraminibus suis (in ihren Höhlen), Vulg. – b) durch Kunst, for. acus, Nadelöhr, Vulg. Matth. 19, 24 u. Augustin. epist. 130, 2: for. trochleae, der Haken od. Ring eines Klobens, Vitr.: for. valvae, Petron.: operculi foramina, Liv.: parietum et fenestrarum foramina, Col.: convexa foramina retis, Ov.: tibia foramine pauco, mit wenig Löchern, Hor. terebrā foramen facere, cavare, Cels. u. Col.: prolabi in cloacae foramen, Suet.: foramine e terra emergere, Vell.: inventa in eo (scuto) foramina CXX, Caes.: neque porta neque ullum foramen erat, Sisenn. fr.: foraminibus et rimis aurem admovent, sie legen ihr Ohr an die Öffnungen (der durchbrochenen Felderdecke) u. Ritze, Tac.

Translations

hole

Adyghe: абан, гъуанэ; Albanian: vrimë; Aleut: hunax̂, tatax̂; Apache Western Apache: o'i'án; Arabic: ⁧ثَقْب⁩, ⁧حُفْرة⁩; Egyptian Arabic: ⁧حرق⁩, ⁧خرم⁩; Hijazi Arabic: ⁧خُرْق⁩, ⁧خُرْم⁩, ⁧فَتْحة⁩, ⁧حُفرة⁩, ⁧ثُقْب⁩; South Levantine Arabic: ⁧خرم⁩, ⁧خزق⁩; Aragonese: forau; Armenian: անցք, ծակ; Aromanian: gavrã, guvã; Assamese: গাঁত, ফুটা; Asturian: furacu, buracu, fueyu; Azerbaijani: deşik, dəlik; Bashkir: батынҡы урын, соҡор; Belarusian: дзі́рка; Bengali: গর্ত; Bulgarian: дупка, яма; Burmese: တွင်း; Catalan: forat; Chechen: ӏуьрг; Cherokee: ᎠᏔᎴᏒᎢ; Chinese Cantonese: 窿; Mandarin: 孔, 洞, 穴; Corsican: tufone; Crimean Tatar: teşik; Czech: díra; Danish: hul; Dutch: gaatje, gat, holletje, opening; Erzya: варя; Esperanto: truo; Estonian: auk; Evenki: саңар; Faroese: hol; Finnish: kuoppa, kolo; French: creux, trou; Galician: burato, buraco, pía, foca; Georgian: ნახვრეტი, ხვრელი; German: Loch, Grube, Grübchen, Mulde, Vertiefung, Kerbe; Greek: τρύπα, οπή; Ancient Greek: βόθρος, ὀπή, τρυμαλιά, τρυμαλιή, τρύμη, τρῦπα, τρύπη, τρύπημα; Greenlandic: putu; Hebrew: ⁧חור \ חֹר⁩; Hindi: छेद, छिद्र; Hungarian: lyuk; Icelandic: hola; Ido: truo; Ilocano: abut; Indonesian: lubang; Ingrian: reikä, uuttu; Ingush: ӏург; Irish: poll; Italian: buco, pertugio, foro, cunicolo, fessura; Japanese: 穴; Kapampangan: busbus; Karachay-Balkar: тешик; Karaim: tiešik; Kaurna: yapa; Kazakh: тесік, жыртық; Khakas: тизік; Khmer: រូង, រន្ធ; Kikuyu: irima; Korean: 구멍; Kumyk: тешик; Kurdish Central Kurdish: ⁧چاڵ⁩; Northern Kurdish: kun; Kyrgyz: тешик; Lao: ຂຸມ, ຮູ; Latin: cavum, foramen, fovea, lacuna; Latvian: bedre, dobums; Lingala: libúlú; Lithuanian: duobė; Lombard: bus; Macedonian: дупка; Malay: lubang; Malayalam: തുള, ദ്വാരം, ഓട്ട, സുഷിരം; Manx: towl; Maori: poka; Mongolian: нүх; Nanai: сангар; Nogai: тесик; Norwegian: hull; Occitan: trauc; Odia: ଛିଦ୍ର; Old Church Slavonic Cyrillic: дира; Old Prussian: prālī; Pashto: ⁧سورى⁩, ⁧بغره⁩, ⁧غار⁩, ⁧منفذ⁩; Persian: ⁧سوراخ⁩; Plautdietsch: Loch; Polish: dziura; Portuguese: buraco, oco; Punjabi: ਮੋਰੀ, ਮੋਰਾ; Quechua: t'uqu; Romanian: gaură; Russian: впадина, яма; Samoan: lua; Saterland Frisian: Gat; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: отвор, рупа; Roman: otvor, rupa; Shor: тежик; Sicilian: pirtusu, purtusu, bucu; Skolt Sami: kååʹpp; Slovak: diera; Slovene: luknja; Southern Altai: тежик; Spanish: agujero, hoyo, abolladura, hendidura, depresión, pozo; Swedish: hål; Tagalog: butas; Tajik: сурох; Tamil: ஓட்டை; Tatar: чокыр, батынкылык; Thai: หลุม, รู; Tibetan: ཁུང་བུ, ས་དོང; Tocharian B: kāre; Tofa: дэлік; Turkish: delik; Turkmen: deşik; Tuvan: дежик; Ukrainian: ді́рка; Urdu: ⁧چھید⁩; Urum: тэшик; Uyghur: ⁧تۆشۈك⁩; Uzbek: teshik, tuynuk; Venetian: bus; Vietnamese: lỗ; Vilamovian: łöch; Volapük: hog; White Hmong: qhov; Yakut: хайаҕас; Yiddish: ⁧לאָך⁩; Zazaki: qul; Zhuang: congh