homicida
ἢν μή τις ὥσπερ σφηκιὰν βλίττῃ με κἀρεθίζῃ → may no one squeeze me and tease me like a wasp | may no one smoke me and tease me like a wasp | but if anyone annoys me and rifles my nest, they'll find a wasp inside | still if you wake a wasps' nest then of wasps you must beware
Latin > English
homicida homicidae N C :: murderer, homicide; killer of men (applied to epic heros)
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
hŏmĭcīda: ae, comm. homo-caedo,
I a man-slayer, homicide, a murderer, murderess (syn.: interfector, sicarius, percussor).
I Lit.: statuendum tibi esse, utrum illi, qui istam rem gesserunt, homicidaene sint, an vindices libertatis ... Confiteor eos plus quam sicarios, plus quam homicidas, plus etiam quam parricidas esse, Cic. Phil. 2, 12, 30 sq.; Juv. 2, 26; Quint. 7, 3, 34: an, qui se interficit, homicida sit, id. 7, 3, 7: mandatores caedis perinde ut homicidae puniuntur, Paul. Sent. 5, 23, 11: qui, cum vellet occidere, id casu aliquo perpetrare non potuit, ut homicida punitur, id. 5, 23, 3; cf. Gai Inst. 3, 194.—Of a woman: quid si tantum homicida? quid si tantum rea fuisses? Sen. Contr. 1, 2.—*
II In a good sense, as a transl. of the Homeric ἀνδροφόνος, an epithet of Hector, slayer of men, Hor. Epod. 17, 12.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
hŏmĭcīda,¹³ æ, m. (homo, cædo), homicide, meurtrier, assassin : Cic. Phil. 2, 30 || f., Sen. Rhet. Contr. 1, 2 || [épith. d’Hector tueur d’hommes : Hor. Epo. 17, 12.
Latin > German (Georges)
homicīda, ae, c. (homo u. caedo), der Menschentöter, der Mörder, die Mörderin, Cic. u.a.: als fem., Sen. contr. 1, 2, 5. – im guten Sinne von Hektor, nach dem homer. ἀνδροφόνος, Männer-, Menschenwürger, Hor. ep. 17, 12.
Spanish > Greek
ἀνθρωποκτόνος, ἀνδροθνής, ἀκρόχειρος, βροτοκτόνος, ἀνδροκμής, αὐτόχειρ, αὐθέντης