scarus

From LSJ

μέγα βιβλίον ἴσον τῷ μεγάλῳ κακῷ → a big book is the same as a big bad | a big book is the same as a big pain | a big book is a big evil | big book, big bad

Source

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

scărus: (scārus, Enn. ap. App. Mag. p. 299), i, m., = σκάρος,>
I scar, a kind of seafish much esteemed by the Romans; acc. to some, a species of wrasse: Labrus scarus, Linn.; Plin. 9, 17, 29, § 62; Ov. Hal. 9; 119; Col. 8, 16, 1 and 9; Enn. l. l.; Hor. S. 2, 2, 22; id. Epod. 2, 50; Mart. 13, 84; Fest. s. v. pollucere, p. 253: scarorum jocinora, Suet. Vit. 13.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

scărus,¹³ ī, m. (σκάρος), scare [poisson de mer] : Hor. S. 2, 2, 22 ; Plin. 9, 62.

Latin > German (Georges)

scarus, ī, m. (σκάρος), ein sehr schmackhafter Meerfisch, der gemeine Papageifisch, Enn. fr. var. 40 Vahlen. Plin. 9, 62. Hor. sat. 2, 2, 22. Cael. Aur. de morb. chron. 1, 1, 22: quattuor (IIII) scari (als Abbildung), Corp. inscr. Lat. 6, 9671. Curios. urb. reg. VIII: scarorum iocinora, Suet. Vit. 13, 2.

Latin > Chinese

scarus, i. m. :: 碎牙魚