uterus
κάμψαι διαύλου θάτερον κῶλον πάλιν → bend back along the second turn of the race, turning the bend and coming back for the second leg of the double run, run the homeward course, retrace one's steps
Latin > English
uterus uteri N M :: womb; belly, abdomen
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
ŭtĕrus: i, m. (collat. form ŭter, Caecil. ap. Non. 188, 15;
I neutr. collat. form ŭtĕ-rum, i, Plaut. Aul. 4, 7, 10, acc. to Non. 229, 33; Turp. and Afran. ib.) [Sanscr. uttara, later; Gr. ὕστερος; cf. Gr. ὑστέρα, womb; Sanscr. udaram, belly; Engl. udder, the womb, matrix (syn. volva).
I Lit.: utero exorti dolores, Plaut. Am. 5, 1, 40: perii, mea nutrix, uterum dolet! id. Aul. 4, 7, 10; id. Truc. 1, 2, 96: quae te beluam ex utero, non hominem fudit, Cic. Fragm. ap. Serv. Verg. A. 8, 139; Plaut. Truc. 1, 2, 97; Hirt. ap. Quint. 8, 3, 54; Prop. 4, 1, 100; Hor. C. 3, 22, 2; Ov. M. 9, 280; 9, 315; 10, 495; id. F. 2, 452; Tac. A. 1, 59; Plin. 9, 6, 5, § 13.—
II Transf.
A Of the cavities of the earth, from which the first creatures are represented to have come forth, Lucr. 5, 806; cf. Lact. 2, 11 init.—
B The fruit of the womb, a fetus, child, young: feminae uterum gerentes, i. e. pregnant, Cels. 2, 10; Tac. A. 1, 59.—Of animals, Varr. R. R. 2, 2, 14; Plin. 8, 40, 62, § 151.—
C In gen., the belly, paunch: me puero uterus erat solarium: ubi iste monebat esse, etc., Plaut. Fragm. ap. Gell. 3, 3, 5; Verg. A. 7, 499; Cels. 4, 1; Juv. 10, 309; Luc. 6, 115; 9, 773.— Of swans, Plin. 10, 47, 66, § 131.—
2 Of inanimate things; of the Trojan horse, Verg. A. 2, 52: dolii, Col. 12, 4, 5: lato utero (navium), Tac. A. 2, 6.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
ŭtĕrus,¹⁰ ī, m.,
1 sein ou ventre de la mère, utérus : Pl. Truc. 200, etc. ; Hor. O. 3, 22, 2 ; Prop. 4, 1, 100 ; Ov. M. 9, 280, etc. ; Plin. 9, 13 || sein de la terre : Lucr. 5, 806
2 fruit de la femme, enfant dans le sein de sa mère : Cels. Med. 2, 10 ; Tac. Ann. 1, 59 || [fruit des animaux] ventrée : Varro R. 2, 2, 14 ; Plin. 8, 151
3 ventre, flanc d’un animal : Virg. En. 7, 499 || flanc d’un navire : Tac. Ann. 2, 6 ; [d’un tonneau] Col. Rust. 12, 4, 5 ; [du cheval de Troie] Virg. En. 2, 52.
Latin > German (Georges)
uterus, ī, m. (zu altind. udáram, Bauch), I) der Leib, Unterleib, Bauch, 1) im allg., Plaut. u. Verg. – 2) insbes., der Mutterleib, die Gebärmutter, bei Menschen u. Tieren, Plaut., Cic., Varro u.a.: tumor uteri, dicker Leib, Hieron.: uterus matris, Cels.: uterus maternus, Sen.: uterus uxoris, Tac.: onus od. pondus uteri, die Leibesfrucht, Ov. u. Prop.: uterus gravis, Ov.: laborantes utero puellae, Hor.: diva potens uteri, die Geburtsgöttin, Ov.: uterum gerere, schwanger sein, Cels., od. (v. Tieren) trächtig sein, Plin.: quae (animalia) ut sunt ex utero edita, Lact.: duodecennis filia ab utero (vom M. an) muta, Sulp. Sev.: quae te beluam ex utero, non hominem fudit, Cic. fr. – Meton.: a) die Geburt, das Gebären, uno utero, ICt.: facilior, der Tiere, Plin. – b) die Erdhüllen, aus denen die ersten Geschöpfe entsprossen sein sollten, Lucr. 5, 805; vgl. Lact. 2, 11 in. – II) übtr., der Bauch = das Innere, zB. des Fasses, Colum.: des Schiffes, Tac.: des trojanischen Pferdes, Verg. – / a) uterum, ī, n. = uterus, Turpil. com. 179. Afran. com. 346. Plaut. aul. 691. Gell. 3, 16, 1. – b) uter = uterus, Caecil. com. 94; vgl. Exc. ex Charis. art. gramm. 540, 13 u. Gloss. II, 261, 45 ›uter, γαστήρ‹.
Translations
womb
Afrikaans: baarmoeder; Albanian: an, mitër; Arabic: رَحِم, بَيْت الْوَلِد; Moroccan Arabic: والدة; Armenian: արգանդ; Asturian: úteru; Azerbaijani: uşaqlıq, bətn; Belarusian: матка, чэ́рава; Bengali: জরায়ু; Breton: mamm; Bulgarian: матка, утроба; Burmese: သားအိမ်; Catalan: úter, matriu; Central Melanau: peranakan; Chinese Cantonese: 子宮, 子宫; Mandarin: 子宮, 子宫; Min Nan: 子宮, 子宫, 生囝袋; Classical Nahuatl: nānyōtl; Czech: děloha; Danish: livmoder; Dhivehi: ރަހިމު; Dutch: baarmoeder; Elfdalian: livmųoðer; Esperanto: utero; Estonian: emakas; Faroese: lívmóðir; Finnish: kohtu; French: utérus, ventre, matrice, sein, entrailles; Galician: útero, madre, ventre, seo, entrañas; Georgian: საშვილოსნოს; German: Gebärmutter; Uterus; Mutterleib, Schoß; Gothic: 𐍅𐌰𐌼𐌱𐌰, 𐌺𐌹𐌻𐌸𐌴𐌹; Greek: μήτρα; Ancient Greek: μήτρα, ὑστέρα, ὑστέρη, δελφύς, δελφύα; Greenlandic: illiaq; Guaraní: ye; Gujarati: ગર્ભાશય; Hebrew: רֶחֶם \ רַחַם; Hindi: गर्भ, गर्भाशय; Hungarian: méh; Icelandic: leg, móðurlíf; Indonesian: rahim; Interlingua: utero, matrice; Irish: broinn; Italian: utero, grembo; Japanese: 子宮, 母胎; Kannada: ಗರ್ಭಕೋಶ; Kazakh: жатыр; Khmer: ស្បូន; Korean: 자궁(子宮); Kurdish Central Kurdish: مِناڵدان; Northern Kurdish: malzarok; Kyrgyz: жатын; Lao: ມົດລູກ; Latin: matrix, uterus, uterum; Latvian: dzemde; Lithuanian: gimda; Luxembourgish: Matrice, Gebärmutter, Uterus; Macedonian: матка, утроба; Malagasy: bobo, fananahana, vohoka; Malay: rahim, peranakan, kandung, kandungan, uterus; Malayalam: ഗര്ഭപാത്രം; Maltese: ġuf; Manx: brein; Maori: wharekano, wharekākano, wharetangata; Marathi: गर्भाशय; Middle English: matrice, maris, wombe; Mongolian: сав, умай, хэвлий; Navajo: iishchʼid; Nepali: पाठेघर; Norwegian Bokmål: livmor; Nynorsk: livmor; Old Church Slavonic Cyrillic: чрѣво; Old East Slavic: черево; Old English: innoþ, cwiþ, hrif, ċildhama; Pashto: رحم, توملنه, زيلان; Persian: رحم, زهدان, زاقدان; Polish: macica; Portuguese: útero, matriz; Quechua: kisma; Romanian: uter, matcă; Romansch: madra, uterus; Russian: матка, утроба, чрево; Rusyn: матка; Sami Inari: kuáhtu; Northern: mánágoahti, eatniheagga, goaŧŧu; Skolt: vuõbdd; Southern: boernesgåetie, jiemie; Sanskrit: गर्भ; Scottish Gaelic: machlag, broinn, brù; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: матерница, материца, утроба; Roman: maternica, materica, utroba; Slovak: maternica; Slovene: maternica; Sorbian Upper Sorbian: maćernica, rodźeńca; Spanish: útero, matriz; Sranan Tongo: bere; Sundanese: ᮕᮤᮃᮔᮊᮔ᮪; Swahili: nyumba ya uzazi, tumbo; Swedish: livmoder; Tagalog: bahay-bata, sinapupunan, matris, utero; Tajik: бачадон, раҳим, заҳдон; Tamil: கருப்பை; Telugu: గర్భం, గర్భాశయము; Thai: มดลูก; Tocharian B: kaläl, kātso; Tupinambá: ygé; Turkish: rahim, dölyatağı, uterus; Turkmen: ýatgy; Ugaritic: 𐎗𐎈𐎎; Ukrainian: матка, утроба, черево; Urdu: گربھ, رحم; Uyghur: بەچىدان, قارىن, ماتكا; Uzbek: bachadon, matka; Venetian: mare; Vietnamese: tử cung, dạ con; Volapük: vüm, motavüm; Welsh: croth; Old Welsh: gumbelauc; Yiddish: טראַכט, מוטערטראַכט, הייבמוטער
Latin > Chinese
uterus, i. m. :: 胎。肚腹。胚胎。船倉。Uterum gerere 懷胎。Diva potens uteri (Lucina) 主產之女神名。