consolido
Κύριε, σῶσον τὸν δοῦλον σου κτλ. → Lord, save your slave ... (mosaic inscription from 4th cent. church in the Negev)
Latin > English
consolido consolidare, consolidavi, consolidatus V TRANS :: solidify, make solid/thick; merge (usufruct) attached property, consolidate
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
con-sŏlĭdo: no
I perf., ātum, 1, v. a., to make firm or solid, to make thick, condense (not ante - Aug.).
I In gen.: parietem in unam crassitudinem, Vitr. 2, 8, 7.—
II Esp.: templa, saxa, marmora ferro plumboque consolidata ruunt, Aug. Serm. 84, 1. —Jurid. t. t., to confirm, settle the usufruct or the right of possession in a thing, to consolidate, Dig. 7, 2, 3, § 2; 7, 2, 6 pr.; 23, 3, 78.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
cōnsŏlĭdō, āvī, ātum, āre, tr.,
1 consolider : Vitr. Arch. 2, 8, 7 || [fig.] fortifier, affermir : Vulg. Ezech. 34, 4
2 consolider [droit] : Dig. 7, 2, 6, v. consolidatio.
Latin > German (Georges)
cōn-solido, āvī, ātum, āre, fest machen, I) eig.: quod infirmum fuit non consolidastis, Vulg. Ezech. 34, 4: c. clavos suos, fest einschlagen, Vulg. Isai. 54, 2: c. rite opus, Ven. Fort. carm. 1, 11, 24: parietem in unam crassitudinem, verdichten, Vitr. 2, 8, 7. – II) übtr., als jurist. t. t., den Nießbrauch oder das Eigentumsrecht einer Sache sichern, feststellen, konsolidieren, ICt.