tarde

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ἀμβλύς εἰμι καὶ κατηρτυκὼς κακῶν → I'm jaded and with much experience of evils

Source

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

tardē: adv., v. tardus.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

tardē,⁹
1 lentement : tardius Cic. Nat. 2, 51, plus lentement ; -dissime Cic. Cæc. 7, avec le plus de lenteur, cf. Cic. Fin. 5, 41 ; Verr. 2, 1, 26
2 tardivement, tard : Cic. Att. 4, 14, 1 ; Fam. 2, 9, 1.

Latin > German (Georges)

tardē, Adv. m. Comp. u. Superl. (tardus), I) langsam (Ggstz. celeriter, cito, strenue), navigare, Cic.: crescere, Verg.: tardius moveri, Cic.: tardius an citius, Sen.: vel citius vel tardius, Augustin.: tardissime iudicare, Cic. – II) nicht zeitig, spät, tarde, immo iam sero (zu spät), Petron.: triennio tardius (später) triumphare, Cic.: tardissime perferri, Cic.: eoque tardius ad te scripsi, quod etc., Cic.: oportet autem nonā quāque die vinum moveri aut curari, vel si tardius, undecimā, Pallad. 11, 14, 3: erumpunt a primo satu legumina die quarto, vel cum tardissime (wenn auch noch so spät, spätestens), septimo, Plin. 18, 51: quattuor aut quinque tardissime diebus florere incipiunt, Plin. 18, 56: tametsi tantam calamitatem rei publicae quam tardissime (so spät als möglich) audire optandum est, Asin. Pollio in Cic. ep. 10, 33, 1. – nihil existimat sua referre, tardius fiat an citius, später oder früher, Sen. ep. 70, 5: u. so omnes, qui vel citius vel tardius liberantur, Augustin. de civ. dei 21, 17. p. 521, 29 D.2

Spanish > Greek

ἀωρία, βραδύς, ἀποψέ