annato
νέµουσι δ' οἴκους καὶ τὰ ναυστολούµενα ἔσω δόµων σῴζουσιν, οὐδ' ἐρηµίᾳ γυναικὸς οἶκος εὐπινὴς οὐδ' ὄλβιος → they manage households, and save what is brought by sea within the home, and no house deprived of a woman can be tidy and prosperous | They manage the home, and guard within the house the sea-borne wares. No house is clean or prosperous if the wife is absent.
Latin > English
annato annatare, annatavi, annatatus V INTRANS :: swim to/up to; swim beside/alongside
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
an-năto: (better adn-), āre, v. n.
I To swim to or toward: ei insulae crocodili non adnatant, Plin. 8, 25, 38, § 93; Jan here reads adnant; Sil. 10, 610.—With ad: ad manum hominis adnatare, Plin. 9, 29, 46, § 87; 9, 10, 12, § 38.—
II To swim along by or by the side of: comes lateri adnatat, Sen. Agam. 452.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
annatō,¹³ v. adnato.
Latin > German (Georges)
an-nato (ad-nato), āvī, ātum, āre, I) an etw. heranschwimmen, m. ad u. Akk., ad proxima navigia, Auct. b. Alex. 20, 6: ad eas naves, ibid. 21, 2: ad proximas naves, ibid. 31, 6: ad suum myoparonem, ibid. 46, 6: ad manum hominis, ad putamina, Plin. 9, 86: ad eos (quos), Plin. 9, 38 D. (Jan u. Mayh. quos annatant): m. Dat., annatare singulis ternos, Plin. 9, 36: litoribus ex aequore, Sil. 10, 609. – absol., illae (ranae) certatim adnatant, Phaedr. 1, 2, 19: maxime puer qui primus expertus est adnatat, Plin. ep. 9, 33, 6 K. – II) bei etw. schwimmen, m. Dat., comes lateri annatat, Sen. Agam. 450 (473).