gangraena

From LSJ

ἅλμην πιόντες ἐξαπῆλθον τοῦ βίου → they drank seawater and departed from life

Source

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

gangraena: ae, f., = γάγγραινα,
I a cancerous, eating ulcer on the body, a gangrene.
I Lit., Cels. 5, 26, 34; Lucil. ap. Non. 117, 22; Varr. ib. 25.—*
II Trop.: mali gangraena, Varr. ap. Non. 117, 28.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

gangræna, æ, f. (γάγγραινα), gangrène : Cels. Med. 5, 26, 34 || [fig.] Varr. d. Non. 117, 28.

Latin > German (Georges)

gangraena (gangrēna), ae, f. (γάγγραινα), der kalte Brand, Knochenfraß, wodurch ein Teil des Körpers abstirbt, Lucil. 53. Cels. 5, 26. no. 31 u. 34; 7, 33. Plin. 22, 125. – bildl., Varro sat. Men. 408.

Latin > Chinese

gangraena, ae. f. :: 爛瘍

Translations

gangrene

Afrikaans: kouevuur; Albanian: gangrenë; Arabic: غَنْغْرِينَة, غَرْغْرِينَا; Armenian: գանգրենա; Basque: haratustel; Belarusian: гангрэна; Bulgarian: гангрена; Chinese Cantonese: 壞疽, 坏疽; Mandarin: 壞疽, 坏疽; Czech: gangréna, sněť; Danish: koldbrand, gangræn c or; Dutch: gangreen, koudvuur; Esperanto: gangreno; Faroese: kolubrandur; Finnish: kuolio, gangreeni; French: gangrène; Georgian: განგრენა; German: Gangrän, Wundbrand, Brand; Greek: γάγγραινα; Ancient Greek: ἀποσφακέλισις, γάγγραινα, γαγγραίνωσις, διαμύδησις, νέκρωσις, σηπεδών, σῆψις ὀστέων, σφακελισμός, σφάκελος; Hindi: कोथ; Hungarian: gangréna, üszkösödés; Icelandic: ýldudrep, átudrep, brandur, kolbrandur, drep í holdi; Indonesian: gangren; Italian: cancrena; Japanese: 壊疽; Kazakh: гангрена; Khmer: ដំបៅរលួយ; Korean: 회저(壞疽); Latin: gangraena; Macedonian: гангрена; Maori: kikohunga; Marathi: कोथ; Mongolian: үхжил; Navajo: naałdzid, iʼniiyą́ą́ʼ; Nepali: सइनको घाउले; Norwegian Bokmål: koldbrann, gangren; Nynorsk: kaldbrann, gangren; Persian: قانقاریا; Polish: zgorzel, gangrena; Portuguese: gangrena; Romanian: cangrenă; Russian: гангрена; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: гангрена; Roman: gangrena; Slovak: gangréna; Slovene: gangrena; Spanish: gangrena; Swedish: kallbrand, gangrän c or; Tagalog: ganggrena; Tibetan: འདྲུལ་བ; Turkish: kangren; Ukrainian: гангрена; Vietnamese: bệnh thối hoại; Welsh: madredd