lurco

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τί νυ τόξον ἔχεις ἀνεμώλιον αὔτως → why bear your bow in vain, why bear thy bow in vain

Source

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

lurco: (lurcho, Serv. ad Verg. A. 6, 4; Prob. p. 1455 P.), ōnis, m.,
I a gormandizer, glutton.—Lit.: lurco, edax, furax, fugax, Plaut. Pers. 3, 3, 16: vivite lurcones, comedones, vivite ventres, Lucil. ap. Non. 11, 9: lastaurum et lurconem et nebulonem popinonemque appellans, Suet. Gram. 15: lurcones capacis gulae homines et bonorum suorum consumptores, Paul. ex Fest. p. 120.
lurco: āre, v. a., and lurcor, āri,
I v. dep. n. [perh. lura, to have a stomach of leather, to eat voraciously, to devour: lurcare est cum aviditate cibum sumere, Non. 10, 31: lardum, Pomp. ap. Non. 11, 6 (Com. Rel. v. 169 Rib.): ut lurcaretur lardum, Lucil. ib. 11, 2.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

(1) lurcō (lurcho), āre, Pompon. Com. 169 et lurcor (lurchor), ārī, tr., manger gloutonnement, avec voracité : Lucil. Sat. 79 ; Non. 10, 31.
(2) lurcō, ōnis, m., glouton : Pl. Pers. 421 ; Lucil. Sat. 75 ; Suet. Gramm. 15 ; P. Fest. 120.