Ask at the forum if you have an Ancient or Modern Greek query!

botulus

From LSJ

Ubi idem et maximus et honestissimus amor est, aliquando praestat morte jungi, quam vita distrahi → Where indeed the greatest and most honourable love exists, it is much better to be joined by death, than separated by life.

Valerius Maximus, De Factis Dictisque

Latin > English

botulus botuli N M :: sausage; black pudding; stomach filled with delicacies (haggis?); rude word

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

bŏtŭlus: i, m. (orig. like φύσκη and the Ital. budello, derived from the Lat.; Fr. boyau, an intestine; hence like the somewhat differently formed derivatives, Ital. boldone and boldonuccio; Fr. boudin; Engl. pudding),
I a sausage (very rare; acc. to Gell. 17, 7, 11, a vulgar word, used by Laber. for farcimen): botulus genus farciminis, Paul. ex Fest. p. 35 Müll.; Mart. 14, 72; Petr. 49 fin; Apic. 2, 5; Arn. 2, 73; Tert. Apol. 9. —
II Meton., a stomach filled with delicacies, Tert. Jejun. adv. Psych. c. 1.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

bŏtŭlus,¹⁵ ī, m., boudin, saucisson, [en gén.] boyau farci : Gell. 16, 7, 11 ; Mart. 14, 72, 1, || [fig.] boyaux : Tert. Jejun. 1.

Latin > German (Georges)

botulus, ī, m. (umbr.-samn. Urspr.), der Darm, I) Plur. = die Eingeweide, Mam. Claud. de stat. anim. 2, 9 (nach Haupts Verbesserung): interiores botuli, die vollgestopften Ei., exteriores botuli, die vor Wollust gespannten Glieder (penes), Tert. de ieiun. 1. – II) übtr., die Wurst, Laber. com. fr. b. Gell. 16, 7, 11. Mart. 14, 72. Petr. 49, 10. Arnob. 2, 42: botulus cruore distentus, Blutwurst, Tert. apol. 9.

Latin > Chinese

botulus, i. m. :: 肉貫腸