proclive

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ἤπειρον εἰς ἄπειρον ἐκβάλλων πόδα → departing to the limitless mainland

Source

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

prōclīvē: adv., v. proclivis.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

(1) prōclīvĕ,¹⁴ n. pris advt, Lucr. 2, 455, et prōclīvī, adv., en pente, en descendant, [d’où] très vite : Cic. Tusc. 4, 42 || labi proclivius Cic. Or. 191, avoir une cadence trop précipitée.
(2) prōclīvĕ,¹³ is, n., v. proclivis.

Latin > German (Georges)

prōclīve u. prōclīvī, Compar. prōclīvius, Adv. (proclivis), a) abwärts, abschüssig, proclive volubilis, Lucr. 2, 455: proclivi currit oratio, Cic. de fin. 5, 84: proclivi labi, Cic. Tusc. 4, 42: proclivi detrudi, Auct. b. Alex. 76, 1. – b) geneigt, quin proclivius hic iras decurrat ad acres, Lucr. 3, 11: multorum sane operum inventrix et tanto proclivius dea credita, Augustin. de civ. dei 18, 8. – c) leicht, multo proclivius exoriri, Lucr. 2, 792. – / Über die Formen vgl. Gell. 10, 24, 6. Macr. sat. 1, 4, 21. Lachmann Lucr. 2, 455. p. 98. Madvig Cic. de fin. 5, 84. p. 7542. Meißner Cic. Tusc. 4, 28 (wo aber Müller proclives schreibt).