serratus
πενία μόνα τὰς τέχνας ἐγείρει → poverty alone promotes skilled work, necessity is the mother of invention, necessity is the mother of all invention, poverty is the mother of invention, out of necessity comes invention, out of necessity came invention, frugality is the mother of invention
Latin > English
serratus serrata, serratum ADJ :: serrated, toothed like a saw
serratus serratus serrati N M :: coin with notched edges (milled)
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
serrātus: a, um, adj. serra,
I sawshaped, serrated (post-Aug.): dentes, Plin. 11, 37, 61, § 160: folia herbae, id. 25, 8, 46, § 84; cf. ambitus (foliorum), id. 25, 6, 30, § 66: spinae, id. 9, 59, 85, § 182: compages (ossium capitis), id. 11, 37, 48, § 132: morsus (anseris), Petr. 136, 4.—As subst.: serrā-ti, ōrum (sc. nummi), silver coins notched on the edge, Tac. G. 5 fin.; cf. Eckh. Doctr. Num. 5, p. 94 sq.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
serrātus,¹⁵ a, um (serra), en forme de scie, dentelé : Plin. 11, 160, etc.; morsus serratus Petr. 136, 4, morsure qui rappelle celle de la scie || serrati, m. (s.-ent. nummi ) Tac. G. 5, écus dentelés.
Latin > German (Georges)
serrātus, a, um (serra), sägeförmig, gezackt (zackig) wie eine Säge, dentes, Plin.: folia, Plin.: fistula, eine Art Getreidemühle, etwa wie unsere Kaffeemühle, Plin.: morsus (anseris), Petron. – subst., a) serrātī, ōrum, m. (verst. nummi), am Rande gezackte Silberdenare, Serraten, Tac. Germ. 5. – b) serrāta, ae, f. (sc. herba), die Gezackte, v. der Pflanze chamaedrys, Plin. 24, 130.