mansues

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Ὥσπερ οἱ ἐρωτικοὶ ἀπὸ τῶν ἐν αἰσθήσει καλῶν ὁδῷ προϊόντες ἐπ' αὐτὴν καταντῶσι τὴν μίαν τῶν καλῶν πάντων καὶ νοητῶν ἀρχήν → Just as lovers systematically leave behind what is fair to sensation and attain the one true source of all that is fair and intelligible

Source

Latin > English

mansues (gen.), mansuetis ADJ :: tame
mansues mansues (gen.), mansuis ADJ :: tame

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

mansŭēs: ŭis, and ētis, adj. manussuesco,
I tamed, tame (ante- and post-class. for mansuetus, v. mansuesco fin.): mansues pro mansueto, dixit Cato in epistola ad filium, Cato ap. Fest. p. 154 Müll.; cf. Paul. ex Fest. p. 152, 125 Müll.: leonem facere mansuem, Varr. ap. Non. 483, 9 sq.: mitis et mansues, Gell. 5, 14, 21: scio ferocissimos equos atque truces mansuetos et mansues factos, App. M. 7, 23, p. 198, 8: ursa mansues, id. ib. 11, 7, p. 261, 1.—
II Trop., mild, soft, gentle: nunc si me matrem mansues misericordia capsit, Att. ap. Non. 483, 11 (Trag. Rel. v. 453 Rib.): reddam ego te ex fera fame mansuetem, Plaut. As. 1, 2, 19; cf. Plin. 8, 9, 9, § 27: nequeone ego ted interdictis facere mansuetem meis? Plaut. As. 3, 1, 1 Ussing.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

mānsuēs,¹⁴ suētis et suis, adj. [arch.] = mansuetus : Acc., Cat. d. P. Fest. 154 ; Gell. 5, 14, 21 || acc. sing. et pl. mānsuem, mānsuēs Varro Men. 364 ; Apul. M. 11, 8 ; 7, 23 || acc. mānsuētem Pl. As. 145.

Latin > German (Georges)

mānsuēs, is u. ētis (manus u. suesco), an die Hand gewöhnt, zahm, Nom., Acc. tr. 453. Cato fr. inc. bei Fest p. 154 (a), 16 (vgl. Paul. ex Fest. 152, 9): mitis et mansues, Gell. 5, 14, 21: Akk. Sing. mansuem, Varro sat. Men. 364. Apul. met. 11, 8: Akk. Plur. mansues, Apul. met. 7, 23: Akk. Sing. mansuetem, Plaut. asin. 145.

Latin > Chinese

mansues, is vel etis. adj. :: 善良熟者

Translations

tame

Arabic: أَلِيف‎; Armenian: ընտանի; Azerbaijani: əhli, əhliləşmiş; Bikol Central: magaro; Bulgarian: питомен; Catalan: mans; Chinese Mandarin: 馴服的, 驯服的; Czech: krotký; Danish: tam; Dutch: tam; Esperanto: malsovaĝa; Faroese: tamur; Finnish: kesy; French: apprivoisé; Galician: dócil, manso; Georgian: მორჩილი, მოთვინიერებული, მოშინაურებული, გამგონი, თვინიერი, შეჩვეული; German: zahm; Alemannic German: zam; Greek: ήμερος; Ancient Greek: ἅμερος, ἥμερος, κτίλος; Hawaiian: laka; Hebrew: מאולף / מְאֻלָּף‎; Hungarian: szelíd; Icelandic: taminn, gæfur, spakur; Indonesian: jinak; Italian: addomesticato, domato; Japanese: 飼いならされた; Khmer: ផ្សាំង; Korean: 길들인; Latin: mansues, mansuetus, cicur; Low German German Low German: tamm, tahm; Luxembourgish: zam; Malay: jinak; Meänkieli: alju; Norwegian: tam; Old English: tam; Polish: oswojony; Portuguese: domesticado; Russian: приручённый, ручной; Scottish Gaelic: ceannsaichte; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: пѝтом; Roman: pìtom; Slovene: krotek; Spanish: domesticado, manso; Swedish: tam; Tagalog: maamo; Telugu: మచ్చిక; Thai: เชื่อง; Turkish: adamcıl; Welsh: swci