grossus
From LSJ
ξένῳ δὲ σιγᾶν κρεῖττον ἢ κεκραγέναι → it's better for a stranger to keep silence than to shout (Menander)
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
grossus: a, um, adj. kindred with crassus,
I thick (late Lat.): virga, Cassiod. Hist. Eccl. 10, 33.—Comp.: vestis grossior, Sulp. Sev. Dal. 1, 21; Vulg. Ezech. 41, 25; 1 Reg. 12, 10; 2 Chron. 10, 10.—Sup., Cassiod. in Psa. 29, 12; cf.: grossus παχύς, Gloss. Philox.—Hence, adv. only comp.: gros-sĭus, more roughly: definire, Aug. de Duab. Anim. 11, 15.
grossus: i, m. and f.,
I an unripe fig, Cato, R. R. 94; Cels. 5, 12; Plin. 23, 7, 63, § 125; 17, 27, 43, § 254.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
(1) grossus, a, um, gros, épais : Cassiod. Hist. eccl. 10, 33