Arnus
πρὸ συντριβῆς ἡγεῖται ὕβρις → pride goeth before destruction, pride comes before a fall, pride goes before a fall, pride goeth before a fall, pride wenteth before a fall, pride cometh before a fall, pride comes before the fall
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
Arnus: i, m., = Ἄρνος,
I a river of Etruria, now the Arno, Plin. 3, 5, 8, § 50; Tac. A. 1, 79 al.; cf. Mann. Ital. I. 328.—Hence, Arnĭensis, e, adj., of or pertaining to the Arnus: tribus, situated on the Arnus, acc. to Liv. 6, 5, settled A. U. C. 396, most distant from Rome, as Saburana was the nearest: a Saburană usque ad Arniensem, Cic. Agr. 2, 29.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
Arnus,¹⁶ ī, m., Arno [fleuve d’Étrurie] : Liv. 22, 2, 2.
Latin > German (Georges)
Arnus, ī, m. (Ἄρνος), der Hauptfluß Etruriens, der auf den Apenninen entspringt u. bei Pisä in das Tyrrhen. Meer mündet, j. Arno, Liv. 22, 2, 2. Tac. ann. 1, 79. – Dav. Arniēnsis, e, zum Arno gehörig, tribus, am Arno gelegen (die entfernteste), Cic. agr. 2, 79. Liv. 6, 5, 8.