simia

From LSJ

Ἰσχυρότερον δέ γ' οὐδέν ἐστι τοῦ λόγου → Oratione nulla vis superior → Nichts ist gewiss gewaltiger als die Vernunft | Nichts ist gewiss gewalt'ger als der Rede Kraft

Menander, Monostichoi, 258

Latin > English

simia simiae N C :: monkey; ape; (applied to men as term of abuse)

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

sīmĭa: ae, f. (rarely m.), or sīmĭus, ii, m. etym. dub.; perh. akin with similis.
I An ape, Plin. 8, 54, 80, § 215; 11, 44, 100, § 246; Enn. ap. Cic. N. D. 1, 35, 97 (Sat. v. 45 Vahl.); Cic. Div. 1, 34, 76; 2, 32, 69; Plaut. Mil. 2, 2, 7; 2, 2, 23; 2, 2, 106; id. Rud. 3, 1, 6 sq.; 3, 4, 66; Quint. 5, 11, 30 al. —Form simius, Phaedr. 1, 10, 6; 1, 10, 8; Mart. 14, 202; Claud. in Eutr. 1, 303.—
II Esp.
   A As a term of abuse (hence even simia in the masc.): quis hic est simia, qui, etc., Afran. ap. Charis. p. 84; so, simia, Cael. ap. Cic. Fam. 8, 12, 2: simius, Laber. ap. Charis. l. l.; Vatin. ap. Cic. Fam. 5, 10, 1.—
   B Of imitators: vide, ut fastidit simia! Plaut. Most. 4, 2, 4; so, simia, Plin Ep. 1, 5, 2; Capitol. Max. jun. 1; Sid. Ep. 1, 1: simius, Hor. S. 1, 10, 18; Sen. Contr. 4, 26 fin.>

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

sīmĭa,¹⁴ æ, f. (sīmus), singe : Cic. Div. 1, 76 ; 2, 69 || [fig.] imitateur : Plin. Min. Ep. 1, 5, 2.

Latin > German (Georges)

sīmia, ae, f. u. (seltener) sīmius, iī, m. (simus), der Affe, Cic. u.a. – als Schimpfwort auf Menschen: simius iste, dieses Affengesicht, Hor.: quis est hic simia? Afran. fr.: illius simiae vultum subire, Cael. in Cic. ep.: simius, non semissis homo, Vatin. ibid. – bes. von zu eifrigen Nachahmern, Rusticum Stoicorum simiam appellat, Plin. ep. 1, 5, 2. – / Nach Serg. expl. in Donat. 494, 27 K. sagte man hic u. haec simia.

Latin > Greek

πίθηκος, πίθακος, πίθηξ, μιμώ

Latin > Chinese

simia, ae. f. :: 母猴獼猴效人者

Translations

monkey

Afrikaans: aap; Ahom: 𑜎𑜢𑜂𑜫; Albanian: majmun; Alemannic German: aff; Amharic: ዝንጀሮ; Arabic: سَعْدَان, حِبْن, نِسْنَاس, مَيْمُون, قِرْد; Armenian: կապիկ; Aromanian: maimun; Assamese: বান্দৰ; Asturian: monu, simiu; Avar: маймалак; Azerbaijani: meymun; Bashkir: маймыл; Basque: tximino; Bau Bidayuh: oyung; Belarusian: малпа; Bengali: বাঁদর; Bikol Central Bikol Legazpi: ukay; Bikol Naga: amo, kabalang; Bole: bido; Bouyei: lingz, duezlingz; Brunei Malay: ambuk; Bulgarian: маймуна, маймун; Burmese: မျောက်; Canela: cukôj; Catalan: mico; Cebuano: amo; Central Melanau: kuyad; Chamicuro: katujkana; Chechen: маймал; Cherokee: ᎠᏓᎴᏍᎩᏱᏍᎩ, ᏓᎴᏍᎩᏍᎩ; Chickasaw: hattak shawi'; Chinese Cantonese: 馬騮/马骝, 猴子; Dungan: ху, хур; Eastern Min: 猴; Gan: 猴子; Hakka: 猴仔, 猴哥; Hokkien: 猴, 猴仔, 老猴, 猴山, 猴山仔, 魎哀/魉哀; Jin: 毛猴; Mandarin: 猴子, 猴兒/猴儿, 猴; Northern Min: 猴屄, 猴; Wu: 活猻/活狲; Xiang: 猴子; Chukchi: маӈкы; Chuvash: упӑте; Classical Nahuatl: ozomahtli, cuauhchīmal; Cornish: sim; Crimean Tatar: şamek; Czech: opičák, opice; Danish: abe, abekat; Dutch: aap, apin; Eastern Lawa: เฟือะ; Erzya: обезьган; Esperanto: simio; Estonian: pärdik, ahv; Faroese: apa; Finnish: apina; French: singe, guenon; Gagauz: maymun; Galician: mono, simio; Georgian: მაიმუნი; German: Affe, Äffin; Gondi: కోవె; Greek: πίθηκος, μαϊμού; Ancient Greek: πίθηκος, πίθακος, πίθηξ, μιμώ; Greenlandic: aapakaaq; Guaraní: ka'i; Gujarati: વાનર, વાંદરું; Haitian Creole: makak; Hausa: biri, birinya; Hawaiian: keko; Hebrew: קוֹף; Higaonon: amu; Hindi: बंदर or बन्दर, वानर, कपि, मर्कट, बानर; Hungarian: majom; Hunsrik: Aff; Icelandic: api; Ilocano: bakes; Indonesian: kera, monyet; Interlingua: simia; Irish: moncaí; Italian: scimmia; Japanese: 猿, サル; Kanakanabu: ngʉkau; Karachay-Balkar: маймул; Kashmiri: وانٛدُر; Kazakh: маймыл; Khakas: сараамӌын; Khmer: ស្វា; Khün: ᩃᩥ᩠ᨦ; Konkani: मांकड; Korean: 원숭이; Kumyk: маймун; Kurdish Central Kurdish: مەیمون; Northern Kurdish: meymûn; Kyrgyz: маймыл; Ladino Latin: maymona; Lakota: šúŋka wičháša; Lao: ລີງ; Latin: simia, simius, simia; Latvian: pērtiķis, mērkaķis; Lezgi: маймун; Lingala: mpunga, makako; Lisu: ꓚꓬꓹ ꓟꓬꓱꓼ, ꓟꓬꓱꓼ, ꓚꓬꓹ ꓟꓲꓼ; Lithuanian: beždžionė; Low German Dutch Low Saxon: aop; German Low German: Aap, Oop, Aapkatt, Oopkatt; Lü: ᦟᦲᧂ; Luganda: nkima; Luhya: ekhima; Luo: onger; Macedonian: мајмун; Maguindanao: amo, ubal; Malagasy: gidro; Malay: monyet, kera, cewe kerek, ketek; Malayalam: കുരങ്ങന്, കുരങ്ങ്; Maltese: xadin, xadina, kitmejmun, gitmejmun; Manchu: ᠪᠣᠨᡳᡠ, ᠮᠣᠨᡳᠣ; Manx: apag; Maori: hako, maki, makimaki; Maranao: amo', obal; Marathi: माकड, वानर; Mbyá Guaraní: ka'i; Mon: ကၞုဲ; Mongolian Cyrillic: сармагчин, опица, јопац; Mongolian: ᠰᠠᠷᠮᠠᠭᠴᠢᠨ; Nahuatl Central: ozomahtli; Classical: ozomahtli; Nanai: монён; Navajo: mágí, mągí; Neapolitan: scigna; Nivkh: мем, обезьяна; Norman: marmoûset, sînge; North Frisian: ååwe, aab; Northern Thai: ᩃᩥ᩠ᨦ; Norwegian Bokmål: ape, apekatt; Nynorsk: ape, apekatt; Nuer: gɔɔk; Nyar Kur: ฮนูย; O'odham: chahngo; Occitan: monin, monard; Odia: ବାନର; Old East Slavic: мамона, мамонь, обезьꙗна; Old English: apa; Old Norse: api; Ottoman Turkish: میمون; Pali: vānara; Pashto: بيزو; Persian: میمون, بوزینه, کپی; Piedmontese: sumia; Pipil: usumati; Polish: małpa; Portuguese: macaco, símio, mono; Punjabi: ਬੰਦਰ; Quechua: k'usillu; Romanian: maimuță, simie; Russian: обезьяна; Saek: ลิ๊ง; Sanskrit: वानर, कपि; Sardinian: moninca; Saterland Frisian: Oape; Scottish Gaelic: muncaidh; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: ма̀јмун; Roman: màjmun, opica, jopac; Shan: လိင်း; Sinhalese: වඳුරා; Slovak: opica; Slovene: opica; Sorbian Lower Sorbian: nałpa; Spanish: mono, chango, mico, simio; Swahili: tumbili; Swedish: apa; Sylheti: ꠛꠣꠘ꠆ꠖꠞ; Tabaru: mia; Tagal Murut: tanduoi, jabulou; Tagalog: unggoy, tsonggo; Tai Dam: ꪩꪲꪉ; Tajik: маймун; Tamil: குரங்கு; Tatar: маймыл, маймул; Tausug: amu; Telugu: కోతి, వానరము; Ternate: mia; Thai: ลิง; Tibetan: སྤྲེའུ; Tigrinya: ህበይ; Tocharian B: mokoṃśka, mokoṃśke; Turkish: maymun; Turkmen: maýmyn; Tuvan: сарбашкын; Ukrainian: мавпа; Urdu: بندر, وانر, کپی; Uyghur: مايمۇن; Uzbek: maymun; Vietnamese: khỉ; Walloon: séndje, mårticot; Welsh: mwnci; West Coast Bajau: rungui, mook, kuya; Western Bukidnon Manobo: uval; Western Lawa: เฟือะ; White Hmong: liab; Wolof: golo gi; Yakut: эбисийээнэ; Yiddish: מאַלפּע; Yoruba: ọ̀bọ; Yucatec Maya: maʼax; Zhuang: lingz, maxlaeuz, duzlingz; Zulgo-Gemzek: ŋgìlìŋ