pyxis

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εἰργάζοντο λογάδην φέροντες λίθους καὶ ξυνετίθεσαν ὡς ἕκαστόν τι ξυμβαίνοι → they went to work bringing the stones as they picked them out and put them together as each one happened to fit

Source

Latin > English

pyxis pyxidis N F :: small box/casket (originally boxwood) for medicine; iron heel on pestle (L+S)
pyxis pyxis pyxidos/is N F :: small box/casket (originally boxwood) for medicine; iron heel on pestle (L+S)

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

pyxis: (puxis, Juv. 13, 25; Scrib. Comp. 228), ĭdis, f., = πυξίς.
I Lit., a box, a small box, esp. for unguents, medicines, etc. — Orig., of boxes made of boxwood, then of those of any kind of wood, and finally, also, of metallic boxes: veneni, Cic. Cael. 25, 61: aurea, Suet. Ner. 47; cf. id. ib. 12: cornea, Plin. 21, 20, 81, § 137: plumbea, id. 32, 10, 47, § 135.—Belonging to the toilet of women, Petr. 110; Paul. Sent. 3, 6, 83 (al. buxides).—
II Transf.: ferrea, an iron cap fitted to the lower end of a pestle, Plin. 18, 11, 29, § 112.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

pyxis,¹² ĭdis, f. (πυξίς), petite boîte, coffret : Cic. Cæl. 63 ; Suet. Nero 47 ; Plin. 21, 137 || capsule métallique : Plin. 18, 112.

Latin > German (Georges)

pyxis, idis, Akk. Plur. idas, f. (πυξίς), die Büchse, das Büchschen, I) eig., zur Arznei, Salbe usw., eigentl. aus Buchsbaum, dann auch aus anderem Holze, aus Eisen, Blech usw., pyxis veneni, Cic.: aurea, Suet.: stannea, Plin.: auf dem Putztisch, non tamen expositas mensā deprendat amator pyxidas, Ov.: ad dominae vultus... eas; pyxidas invenies et rerum mille colores, Ov. – puxis geschr., Scrib. Larg. 80 u. 228. – II) übtr., p. ferrea, ein (viell. hohles, büchsenförmiges) Eisen im Mörser zum Stampfen, Plin. 18, 112.