viator
Καλὸν δὲ καὶ γέροντι μανθάνειν σοφά → Addiscere aliquid digna res etiam seni → Auch einem Greis ist etwas Weises lernen Zier
Latin > English
viator viatoris N M :: traveler
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
vĭātor: ōris, m. vio.
I In gen., a wayfarer, traveller, Cic. Fat. 15, 34; id. Mil. 21, 55; Caes. B. G. 4, 5; Verg. G. 4, 97; id. Fragm. ap. Don. Vit. Verg.; Hor. C. 3, 4, 30; id. S. 1, 5, 17; Ov. Tr. 2, 271; id. P. 4, 10, 34; Phaedr. 2, 1, 5; Juv. 10, 22; Mart. 2, 6, 14; 11, 13, 1.—
II In partic., a summoner, apparitor, an officer whose duty was to summon persons before the magistrate, Varr. ap. Gell. 13, 12, 6; Cic. Sen. 16, 56; id. Vatin. 9, 22; Liv. 2, 56, 13; 3, 56, 5; Just. Inst. 4, 6; Dig. 5, 1, 82; Inscr. Grut. 627, 1 sqq.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
(1) vĭātŏr, ōris, m. (vio),
1 voyageur : Cic. Mil. 55 ; Cæs. G. 4, 5
2 messager introduisant devant les magistrats, appariteur ; messager officiel : Varr. d. Gell. 13, 12, 6 ; Cic. CM 56 ; Vat. 22 ; Liv. 2, 56, 13.
Latin > German (Georges)
viātor, ōris, m. (vio), I) der Reisende, der Wanderer, Wandersmann, Cic. u.a. – II) ein Unterbeamter, der vor die Magistrate ladende Bote, der Staatsbote, Landbote, Varro b. Gell. 13, 12, 6. Cic. de sen. 56; Vatin. 22. Liv. 2, 56, 13 u.a. Suet. Tib. 2, 2. Corp. inscr. Lat. 6, 1847. 1922. 1923. 2194. Vgl. Mommsen Staatsrecht 1. S. 360 f.
Translations
traveller
Albanian: udhëtar, udhëtare; Arabic: مُسَافِر, سَائِح, سَيَّاح; Armenian: ճանապարհորդ, ճամփորդ, ուղևոր; Azerbaijani: səyyah, səyahətçi; Bashkir: сәйәхәтсе; Basque: bidaiari; Belarusian: падарожнік, падарожніца, вандроўнік, вандроўніца; Bengali: মুসাফির, রাহী; Bulgarian: пътешественик, пътешественица, пътешественичка, пъ́тник, пъ́тница, пъ́тничка; Burmese: ခရီးသည်; Catalan: viatger; Chinese Mandarin: 旅遊者/旅游者, 旅游者, 游客, 旅行家, 旅行者; Czech: cestovatel, cestovatelka; Danish: rejsende; Dutch: reiziger, reizigster; Esperanto: vojaĝanto; Estonian: rändaja; Finnish: matkustaja, matkailija, matkalainen, matkaaja; French: voyageur, voyageuse; Galician: viaxeiro; Georgian: მოგზაური; German: Reisender, Reisende; Greek: ταξιδιώτης, ταξιδιώτρια, ταξιδιώτισσα; Ancient Greek: δρομίας, ἔμπορος, κελευθήτης, κελευθοπόρος, ὁδευτής, ὁδίτης, ὁδίτας, ὁδοιπόρος, στιβεύς; Hebrew: נוֹסֵעַ, נוֹסַעַת; Hindi: मुसाफ़िर, यात्री; Hungarian: utazó; Icelandic: ferðamaður, ferðalangur; Irish: taistealaí, imeachtaí; Italian: viaggiatore, viaggiatrice, viandante, girovago; Japanese: 旅人, 旅行者; Kazakh: саяхатшы, жиһанкез; Khmer: អ្នកដំណើរ; Kikuyu: mũgendi; Korean: 여행자(旅行者); Kurdish Northern Kurdish: gerok; Kyrgyz: саякатчы; Lao: ນັກທ່ຽວ, ນັກເດີນທາງ; Latin: viator, viatrix, peregrinus; Latvian: ceļotājs, ceļotāja; Lithuanian: keliautojas; Macedonian: патник, патничка; Malay: perantau; Mongolian: аянч, аянчин; Ngazidja Comorian: msafiri; Norman: viageux; Norwegian Bokmål: reisende; Occitan: viatjaire; Old Church Slavonic Cyrillic: пѫтьникъ; Pashto: يونی, مسافر, سياح; Persian: مسافر, سیاح; Polish: podróżnik, podróżniczka; Portuguese: viajante; Romanian: călător, voiajor, drumeț; Russian: путешественник, путешественница, путник, путница; Scottish Gaelic: taistealaiche; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: пу̑тнӣк, пу̑тница; Roman: pȗtnīk, pȗtnica; Slovak: cestovateľ, cestovateľka; Slovene: potnik, potnica; Spanish: viajero; Swahili: msafiri, wasafiri; Swedish: resenär, upptäcksresande; Tagalog: manlalakbay; Tajik: сайёҳ, мусофир; Tatar: сәяхәтче; Telugu: ప్రయాణికుడు; Thai: นักเดินทาง, ผู้เดินทาง; Tibetan: འགྲུལ་པ, འགྲུལ་བཞུད་བྱེད་མཁན; Turkish: yolcu, gezgin, seyyah; Turkmen: syýahatçy; Ukrainian: мандрі́вник, мандрі́вниця, подорожник, подорожниця; Urdu: مسافر, یاتری, سیاح; Uyghur: ساياھەتچى; Uzbek: sayyoh, sayohatchi; Vietnamese: người đi du lịch; Volapük: tävan, hitävan, jitävan; Welsh: teithiwr