laboriosus

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τὸ πεπρωμένον φυγεῖν ἀδύνατον → you can't escape your destiny | there is no escaping from destiny | it's impossible to escape from what is destined | it is impossible to escape from what is destined | what is fated is impossible to escape | if you're born to be hanged, then you'll never be drowned | he that is born to be hanged shall never be drowned | if you are born to be hanged then you'll never be drowned | if you're born to be hanged then you'll never be drowned| you can't outrun your fate | you cannot outrun your fate | you can't stop fate | that's the way the cookie crumbles

Source

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

lăbōrĭōsus: a, um, adj. 2. labor,
I full of labor, laborious.
I Attended with much labor, laborious, toilsome, wearisome, difficult, troublesome (syn. operosus): deambulatio, Ter. Heaut. 4, 6, 3: nihil laboriosius, Cic. Leg. 3, 8, 19: operum longe maximum ac laboriosissimum, Liv. 5, 19 fin.: si qua laboriosa est (fabula), ad me curritur, difficult to put on the stage, opp. lenis, Ter. Heaut. prol. 44.—
II Transf.
   A Inclined to labor, laborious, industrious, for the Gr. φιλόπονος (syn.: impiger, industrius): homines, Cic. Tusc. 2, 15, 35: bos laboriosissimus hominis socius in agricultura, Col. 6 praef. § 7.—
   B That undergoes much trouble and hardship, troubled, harassed: quid enim nobis duobus laboriosius? Cic. Mil. 2, 5; id. Phil. 11, 4, 4.—Hence, adv.: lăbōrĭōsē, laboriously, wearisomely, with difficulty, Plaut. Merc. 3, 1, 9; Cels. 5, 17, 2; Cat. 38, 1.—Comp., Cic. Rosc. Com. 11, 31.—Sup.: laboriosissime, Cic. Div. in Caecil. 21, 71; Suet. Caes. 43 al.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

lăbōrĭōsus,¹¹ a, um (labor 2),
1 qui demande du travail, de la peine, laborieux, pénible : exercitatio corporis laboriosa Cic. Fin. 1, 32, exercice physique pénible || -sior Cic. Leg. 3, 19 ; -issimus Cic. Pomp. 70
2 qui se donne au travail, actif, laborieux : Cic. Tusc. 2, 35 || qui est dans le travail, dans la fatigue, dans la peine : Cic. Mil. 5 ; Phil. 11, 8 || qui est dans la souffrance : Cic. Tusc. 4, 18.

Latin > German (Georges)

labōriōsus, a, um (2. labor), I) mit viel Arbeit u. Mühe verbunden, voller Arbeit u. Mühe, mühsam, beschwerlich, a) v. Lebl.: fabula, Ter.: deambulatio non lab., Ter.: quis nostrûm exercitationem ullam corporis suscipit laboriosam, nisi etc.? Cic.: vitae genus laboriosum sequi (Ggstz. vitae genus quietum sequi), Cic.: nihil laboriosius, Cic.: laboriosissimum opus, Liv. – b) v. Pers., voller Tätigkeit, tätig, arbeitsam, homo, Cic.: bos laboriosissimus socius in agricultura, Colum. – II) viel Not ausstehend, sich plackend, sich abplackend, viel geplagt (griech. πολύτλας), a) v. Pers. (Ggstz. otiosus), vos laboriosos existiment, quibus otiosis ne in communi quidem otio liceat esse, Cic.: homo laboriosus et adversis suis clarus, Plin. ep.: remiges Ulixei, Hor.: laboriosa cohors Ulixei, Hor. – quid nobis duobus laboriosius? Cic. – b) v. Lebl.: ›aerumna‹ est aegritudo laboriosa, Harm ist sich abquälender Gram, Cic. Tusc. 4, 18.