sanitas
Latin > English
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
sānĭtas: ātis, f. sanus,
I soundness of body, health (class., = valetudo bona; opp. valetudo mala, imbecillitas; cf. also salus): est enim corporis temperatio, cum ea congruunt inter se, e quibus constamus, sanitas: sic animi dicitur, cum ejus judicia opinionesque concordant, Cic. Tusc. 4, 13, 30; cf. id. ib. 3, 5, 10.
I Lit.: Apollo, quaeso te, ut des Salutem et sanitatem nostrae familiae, Plaut. Merc. 4, 1, 13 (for which, in the old formula of prayer in Cato, R. R. 141, 3: duis bonam salutem valetudinemque; v. salus, I. A. init.): ut alimenta sanis corporibus agricultura, sic sanitatem aegris medicina promittit, Cels. prooem. init.: qui incorruptā sanitate sunt, Cic. Opt. Gen. 3, 8 (for which, shortly before: contenti bonā valetudine): aegro interim nil ventura sanitas prodest, Sen. Ep. 117, 26; Tac. A. 1, 68 fin.: si robur corporibus bonum, non est minus sanitas, Quint. 5, 10, 89 N. cr.; so, corporis (with integritas), Gell. 18, 1, 5: pecoris, Varr. R. R. 2, 1, 21: hostiae, id. ib. 2, 5, 11: donec sanitate ossis dolor finiatur, by the healthy condition of the bone, i. e. by the bone's being completely healed, Cels. 8, 8 fin.: ad sanitatem dum venit curatio, while the cure is being perfected, Phaedr. 5, 7, 12; cf.: folia ligni ad sanitatem gentium, Vulg. Apoc. 22, 2: redire in statum pristinum sanitatis, Ambros. in Psa. 40, 12: restitui sanitati, to recover, Vulg. Matt. 12, 13; Sulp. Sev. Chron. 1, 13 fin.: sanitatem reddere, Cels. 2, 8; Arn. 7, 39: pristinae aliquem sanitati restituere, Hier. Ep. 76, 8; Sulp. Sev. Vit. St. Mart. 21: recipere sanitatem, Just. 11, 8, 9; Cels. 6, 15 fin.: recuperare sanitatem, Just. 20, 2, 9; 32, 3, 9.—
II Trop.
A Soundness of mind (opp. to passionate excitement), right reason, good sense, discretion, sanity, etc. (v. Cic. Tusc. 4, 13, 30 supra): sanitatem enim animorum positam in tranquillitate quādam constantiāque censebant,...quod in perturbato animo, sicut in corpore, sanitas esse non posset, Cic. Tusc. 3, 4, 9: sua quemque fraus, suum scelus de sanitate ac mente deturbat, id. Pis. 20, 46; pravarum opinionum conturbatio et ipsarum inter se repugnantia sanitate spoliat animum morbisque perturbat, id. Tusc. 4, 10, 23: plebem ad furorem impellit, ut facinore admisso ad sanitatem pudeat reverti, Caes. B. G. 7, 42; 1, 42: ad sanitatem se convertere, Cic. Sull. 5, 17: ad sanitatem redire, id. Fam. 12, 10, 1: ad sanitatem reducere, id. Verr. 2, 2, 40, § 98: perducere ad sanitatem, Hirt. B. G. 8, 22; Cic. Phil. 11, 14, 37; Liv. 2, 29; 2, 45; Phaedr. 4, 25, 35: est omnino Priscus dubiae sanitatis, Plin. Ep. 6, 15, 3.—
B Of style, soundness or correctness of style, propriety, regularity, purity, etc.: insulsitatem et insolentiam, tamquam insaniam orationis odit, sanitatem autem et integritatem quasi religionem et verecundiam orationis probat, Cic. Brut. 82, 284: summi oratoris vel sanitate vel vitio, id. ib. 80, 278: ut (eloquentia) omnem illam salubritatem Atticae dictionis et quasi sanitatem perderet, lost all the healthy vigor and soundness, as it were, of Attic speech, id. ib. 13, 51 (v. salubritas, I. fin.; and cf. id. Opt. Gen. 3, 8): qui suae imbecillitati sanitatis appellationem, quae est maxime contraria, obtendunt, Quint. 12, 10, 15; cf. Tac. Or. 23: eloquentiae, id. ib. 25.—
C Rarely of other abstract things: victoriae, solidity, permanence, Tac. H. 2, 28 fin.: metri, regularity, correctness, Macr. S. 5, 17 fin.>
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
sānĭtās,¹⁰ ātis, f. (sanus),
1 santé [du corps et de l’esprit] : Cic. Tusc. 3, 9 ; 4, 30
2 raison, bon sens : ad sanitatem reducere Cic. Verr. 2, 2, 98 ; se convertere Cic. Sulla 17 ; redire Cic. Fam. 12, 10, 1 ; reverti Cæs. G. 1, 42, 2, ramener à la raison ; revenir à la raison ; dubiæ sanitatis esse Plin. Min. Ep. 6, 15, 3, n’avoir pas tout son bon sens
3 [rhét.] santé du style = pureté, correction, bon goût : Cic. Br. 51 ; 278 ; 284 ; Opt. 8 || victoriæ Tac. H. 2, 28, solidité de la victoire.
Latin > German (Georges)
sānitās, ātis, f. (sanus), die Gesundheit, I) eig., der physisch gesunde Zustand, dah. auch die Genesung (Ggstz. imbecillitas, Quint. 12, 10, 15. Augustin. de civ. dei 19, 4, 2: exitium vel sanitas, Chalcid. Tim. 185 extr.), Cic. u.a.: ossis, Cels.: ulcera sanitati restituere, heilen, Plin.: sanitas debetur medico, Sen.: Plur., sanitates perficere, die Menschen gesund machen, Vulg. Luc. 13, 32. Interpr. Iren. 1, 23, 1. – II) übtr.: 1) der gesunde Seelenzustand, bes. im Ggstz. zur leidenschaftl. Aufregung, die Vernunft, die Besonnenheit (Besinnung), ad sanitatem reverti, Caes., od. redire, Cic., od. se convertere, Cic.: ad sanitatem reducere, Cic.: so auch ad sanitatem perducere, Hirt. b. G., oder revocare, Auct. b. Alex.: alqm ad sanitatem flectere, Liv.: alqm de sanitate ac mente deturbare, Cic.: sanitatem animis afferre, Liv.: sanitat evacans, unvernünftig, Cic. – 2) v. der Rede und v. Redner, das gesunde Wesen, die nüchterne und besonnene Sprache, orationis, Cic.: oratoris, Cic.: eloquentiae, Tac. dial. – 3) v. anderen Abstrakten: metri, Richtigkeit, Regelmäßigkeit, Macr.: victoriae Vollständigkeit, Tac.
Translations
health
Afrikaans: gesondheid; Akkadian: 𒁲; Albanian: shëndet; Amharic: ጤና; Arabic: صِحَّة, عَافِيَة, سَلَامَة; Egyptian Arabic: صحة; Moroccan Arabic: صحة; Armenian: առողջություն; Aromanian: sãnãtati; Assyrian Neo-Aramaic: ܚܘܼܠܡܵܢܵܐ; Asturian: salú; Avar: сахлъи; Azerbaijani: sağlamlıq, səhhət; Bashkir: һаулыҡ; Basque: osasun; Belarusian: здароўе; Bengali: স্বাস্থ্য, আরোগ্য; Breton: yec'hed; Bulgarian: здраве; Burmese: ကျန်းမာရေး; Buryat: элүүр; Catalan: salut, sanitat; Central Atlas Tamazight: ⴰⴷⵡⴰⵙ; Central Dusun: kolidasan; Chechen: могушалла; Chinese Cantonese: 健康; Dungan: җянкон; Hakka: 健康; Mandarin: 健康, 身體, 身体; Min Dong: 健康; Min Nan: 健康; Wu: 健康; Chuvash: сывлӑх; Cornish: yeghes; Crimean Tatar: sağlıq; Czech: zdraví; Dalmatian: santut; Danish: sundhed; Dutch: gezondheid, welzijn; Erzya: шумбрачи; Esperanto: sano; Estonian: tervis; Evenki: авгара; Farefare: ĩmã'asʋm; Faroese: heilsa; Finnish: terveys, olo; French: santé forme; Friulian: salût, sanetât; Gagauz: saalık; Galician: saúde; Georgian: ჯანმრთელობა; German: Gesundheit; Greek: υγεία; Ancient Greek: ὑγεία; Guaraní: tesãi; Gujarati: આરોગ્ય; Haitian Creole: sante; Hausa: lafiya; Hebrew: בְּרִיאוּת; Hindi: तबीयत, आरोग्य, स्वास्थ्य, सेहत; Hungarian: egészség; Hunsrik: Gesundheet, Gesundheit; Iban: pengerai; Icelandic: heilsa; Indonesian: kesehatan; Ingush: могашал; Irish: sláinte; Italian: salute, sanità; Japanese: 健康, 体; Kannada: ಆರೋಗ್ಯದ, ಆರೋಗ್ಯ; Karelian: tervehys; Kazakh: денсаулық; Khmer: សុខភាព; Korean: 건강(健康); Kurdish Northern Kurdish: saxlemî; Kyrgyz: саламаттык; Ladino: sanedad; Lao: ສຸຂະພາບ, ສຸຂະພາບ; Latgalian: veseleiba; Latin: salus, sanitas; Latvian: veselība; Lithuanian: sveikata; Low German: Gesundhait, Gesundheid, Gesundheit, Gesundheet; Luxembourgish: Gesondheet; Macedonian: здравје; Malay: kesihatan; Malayalam: ആരോഗ്യം; Maltese: saħħa; Maori: hauoratanga, hauora; Marathi: आरोग्य; Mizo: hrisèlna; Mongolian Cyrillic: эрүүл мэнд, эрүүл, мэнд; Moore: yĩn-maasem; Navajo: shánah; Nepali: उसाँय्; Norman: sàntaïe; Norwegian Bokmål: helse; Nynorsk: helse; Occitan: santat; Old Church Slavonic Cyrillic: съдравьѥ; Old East Slavic: съдоровие; Pashto: روغتيا; Persian: سلامت, سلامتی, صحت; Polish: zdrowie; Portuguese: saúde; Punjabi: ਸਿਹਤ; Romanian: sănătate; Romansch: sanadad, sandet, sandà; Russian: здоровье, здравие; Rusyn: здоровя; Sanskrit: आरोग्य, स्वास्थ्य, कल्य; Sardinian: saludu, saluru, salutu, sanidade, sanidadi; Scottish Gaelic: slàinte; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: здра̑вље; Roman: zdrȃvlje; Sinhalese: සනීප; Slovak: zdravie; Slovene: zdravje; Spanish: salud, sanidad; Swahili: afya; Swedish: hälsa; Tagalog: kalusugan; Tajik: саломат, сиҳат, саломатӣ, сиҳатӣ; Tamil: நலம்; Tatar: сәламәтлек; Telugu: ఆరోగ్యం, ఆరోగ్యము; Thai: สุขภาพ; Tibetan: འཕྲོད་བསྟེན; Tigrinya: ጥዕና; Turkish: sağlık, sıhhat; Turkmen: saglyk; Ukrainian: здоров'я; Urdu: صحت, طبیعت; Uyghur: سالامەتلىك, ساغلاملىق, سەھىيە; Uzbek: sogʻlik, salomatlik, sihatlik, sihat; Veps: tervhuz'; Vietnamese: sức khỏe; Voro: tervüs; Votic: tervüüz, terveüz; Walloon: santé; Welsh: iechyd; Yakut: доруобуйа; Yiddish: געזונט, געזונטהייַט