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adultero

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Ἐλεεινότατόν μοι φαίνετ' ἀτυχία φίλου → Miseria amici mihi suprema est miseria → Am meisten Mitleid, scheint's, heischt eines Freundes Leid

Menander, Monostichoi, 180

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

ădultĕro: āvi, ātum, 1, v. n. and
I a. [id.], to commit adultery, to pollute, defile.
I Lit., absol. or with acc.: latrocinari, fraudare, adulterare, Cic. Off. 1, 35: jus esset latrocinari: jus adulterare: jus testamenta falsa supponere, id. de Leg. 16, 43: qui dimissam duxerit, adulterat, Vulg. Matt. 5, 32: matronas, Suet. Aug. 67; cf. id. Caes. 6.—Also of brutes: adulteretur et columba milvio, Hor. Epod. 16, 32.—As verb. neutr. of a woman: cum Graeco adulescente, Just. 43, 4.—Freq.,
II Fig., to falsify, adulterate, or give a foreign nature to a thing, to counterfeit: laser adulteratum cummi aut sacopenio aut fabā fractā, Plin. 19, 3, 15, § 40: jus civile pecuniā, Cic. Caecin. 26: simulatio tollit judicium veri idque adulterat, id. Lael. 25, 92; id. Part. 25, 90: adulterantes verbum, Vulg. 2 Cor. 2, 17.—Poet. of Proteus: faciem, changes his form, Ov. F. 1, 373.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

ădultĕrō,¹³ āvī, ātum, āre (ad, alter), tr.,
1 commettre un adultère : Cic. Off. 1, 128 ; adulterari ab aliquo, [en parl. d’une femme] être débauchée par qqn, être entraînée à l’adultère par qqn : Suet. Cæs. 6 ; 48