venter

From LSJ

οὐκ ἂν λάβοις παρὰ τοῦ μὴ ἔχοντος → you can't take from one who doesn't have, you can't squeeze blood out of a turnip, you can't get blood out of a turnip, you can't get blood from a stone, you can't get blood out of a stone

Source

Latin > English

venter ventris N M :: stomach, womb; belly

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

venter: tris, m. perh. for gventer; cf. Gr. γαστήρ; Sanscr. gatharas.
I Lit.
   A In gen., the belly (syn.: alvus, abdomen), Plin. 11, 37, 82. § 207; Cels. 7, 16; Varr. R. R. 2, 7, 4; Cic. Div 2, 58, 119.— Plur., Mart. 13, 26, 1; Plin. 9, 50, 74, § 157. —
   B In partic., as the seat of the stomach, conveying the accessory idea of greediness, gormandizing, the paunch, maw: Cyclopis venter, velut olim turserat alte, Carnibus humanis distentus, Enn. ap. Prisc. p. 870 P. (Ann. v. 326 Vahl.); Plaut. Mil. 1, 1, 33: ventri operam dare, id. Ps. 1, 2, 43; id. Pers. 1, 3, 18; Hor. S. 1, 6, 128; 2, 8, 5; id. Ep. 1, 15, 32; Juv. 3, 167; 11, 40: proin tu tui cottidiani victi ventrem ad me adferas, i. e. an appetite for ordinary food, Plaut. Capt. 4, 2, 75: vivite lurcones, comedones, vivite ventres, ye maws, for ye gluttons, gormandizers, Lucil. ap. Non. 11, 8.—In partic.: ventrem facere, to have a passage at stool, Veg. Vet. 3, 57.—
II Transf.
   A The womb: homines in ventre necandos Conducit, Juv. 6, 596.—
   2    The fruit of the womb, fœtus: ignorans nurum ventrem ferre, Liv 1, 34, 2; Varr. R. R. 2, 1, 19; Col. 6, 24, 2; Dig. 5, 4, 3; 25, 6, 1; 37, 9, 1, § 13; 29, 2, 30; Ov. M. 11, 311; Hor. Epod. 17, 50.—
   B The bowels, entrails, Col. 9, 14, 6; Plin. 11, 20, 23, § 70.—
   C Of any thing that swells or bellies out, a belly, i. e. a swelling, protuberance: tumidoque cucurbita ventre, Prop. 4, 2, 23 (5, 2, 43); Verg. G. 4, 122: lagonae, Juv. 12, 60: concavus tali, Plin. 11, 46, 106, § 255: parietis, Dig. 8, 5, 17: aquae ductus, Vitr. 8, 7.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

ventĕr,⁹ tris, m.,
1 ventre [de l’h. ou des animaux] : Cic. Div. 2, 119 ; Lucr. 5, 1322 ; Varro R. 2, 7, 4 || ventri operam dare Pl. Ps. 175, soigner son ventre, sa panse ; quidquid quæsierat ventri donabat avaro Hor. Ep. 1, 15, 32, tout ce qu’il trouvait, il l’offrait en don à son ventre avide || venter Faliscus, v. Faliscus
2 [fig.] a) sein de la mère : Juv. 6, 596 ; b) ventrem ferre Liv. 1, 34, 2, être en état de grossesse, cf. Varro R. 2, 1, 19, etc. ; c) intestins : Col. Rust. 9, 14, 6 ; Plin. 11, 70 ; d) ventre, flancs : [du concombre] Virg. G. 4, 122 ; [d’une bouteille] Juv. 12, 60 ; [renflement d’un aqueduc] Vitr. Arch. 8, 7. gén. pl. toujours ventrium : Plin. 9, 157 ; Sol. 32, 26 ; Arn. 7, 24.

Latin > German (Georges)

venter, tris, Genet. Plur. trium, m. (vgl. ahd. wan [a] st, der Wanst), der Bauch, Leib, I) eig.: a) übh.: venter summus, imus, Cels.: foedus atque olidus venter, Sen.: venter intumescit, Colum. u. Cels.: venter indurescit, Cels.: venter intentus est, Cels.: fabā venter inflatur, Cic.: Plur., latera ac ventres equorum, Lucr. 5, 1322. – b) als Sitz des Magens, venter creat omnes hasce aerumnas, Plaut.: sit numquam venter expletus, voll vom Essen, Hieron.: ventrem fame domare, Liv.: ut non minus animo quam ventre convivae delectarentur, Nep.: hic in ventrem sumpsit confidentiam, hat sich Mut gegessen (scherzh. = gefaßt), Plaut. – dah. zur Bezeichnung der sinnlichen Lüste, bes. der Gefräßigkeit, ventri operam dare, Plaut.: ventri donabat avaro, Hor.: ventri oboedire, dem Bauche, d.i. den sinnlichen Lüsten frönen, Sall.: ventri ac voluptatibus servire (v. Menschen), Lact.: ventri et pabulo servire (v. Schweine), Lact.: ventri dediti, Augustin. – meton., vivite, ventres, ihr Bäuche, d.i. ihr Fresser, Lucil. 75: u. iste venter, Schmausgenosse, Lucil. 1071. – c) = alvus, der Unterleib, sofern er sich durch den Gang vom Unrate frei macht, fluor ventris, Cels.: venter profluit, Cels.: venter solvitur, Cels.: venter mollitur, Plin.: venter movetur, Suet.: dah. ventrem facere, Stuhlgang haben, Veget. mul. 5, 56, 2: quasi ad ventris solita secedens, um ein natürliches Bedürfnis zu befriedigen, Aur. Vict. epit. 41, 22. – d) der Bauch als Sitz der darin enthaltenen Leibesfrucht, der Mutterleib, ventrem ferre, tragen, v. Schwangeren, Liv., trächtig sein, v. Tieren, XII menses, Varro: homines in ventre necare, Iuven.: qui in ventre est, die Leibesfrucht, ICt.: exsecto ventre extractus, ICt. – meton., die ungeborene Leibesfrucht, tuus, Hor.: maturus, Ov.: venter institutus, exhereditatus, ICt.: ventri prospicere, ICt. – e) meton., venter Faliscus, Magenwurst, Preßwurst, Varro LL. 5, 111. Mart. 4, 46, 8. – II) übtr., für alles Bauchartige an Gegenständen, das Bauchige, ber Bauch, die Höhlung, cresceret in ventrem cucumis, Verg.: lagoenae, Iuven.: si paries ventrem faceret, einen Bauch machte, Plaut.: so auch der Bauch einer Wasserleitung (d.i. der von dem einen Fuße des Berges bis zu dem anderen im Tale fortgeführte Teil), Vitr. – / Genet. Plur. immer ventrium, zB. Plin. 9, 157. Solin. 32, 26. Arnob. 7, 24.

Latin > Chinese

venter, tris. m. :: 肚。脾胃。鐵。胎。胚胎。墻凸。Ventrem exonerare 出恭。登東。Ventrem ferre 懷孕。In ventrem crescere vel latescere 漸肚大。Ventres. plur. 六腑。腸。貪饕者。

Translations

stomach

Afar: garba; Afrikaans: maag; Alawa: gundjäl; Albanian: mullë, zgrof, stomak; Aleut: sanĝux̂; Amharic: ጨጓራ; Apache Western Apache: bibid; Arabic: مَعِدَة, مِعْدَة, بَطْن; Egyptian Arabic: معدة; Hijazi Arabic: معدة, بطن; Aragonese: estomago; Aramaic Hebrew: אסטומכא; Syriac: ܐܣܛܘܡܟܐ; Armenian: ստամոքս; Assamese: পাকস্থলী; Asturian: estómagu; Aymara: puraka; Azerbaijani: mədə, qarın; Balinese: ᬩᬲᬂ; Bashkir: ашҡаҙан; Basque: urdail; Bau Bidayuh: toin, kubuoi; Belarusian: страўнік, жалудак; Bengali: পাকস্থলী; Bikol Central: tulak; Breton: stomog; Brunei Malay: parut; Bulgarian: стомах, желъ́дък; Burmese: ဝမ်း; Carpathian Rusyn: жалудок; Catalan: estómac; Central Melanau: pait; Chakma: 𑄞𑄢𑄣𑄴; Chamicuro: knani; Chechen: хьер, зорх; Chichewa: chifu; Chickasaw: ittakoba'; Chinese Cantonese: ; Dungan: дўзы; Eastern Min: 胃; Hakka: 胃; Hokkien: 胃; Mandarin: , 肚子; Wu: 胃; Chuvash: хырӑм; Corsican: stomacu; Crimean Tatar: mide, aşqazan; Czech: žaludek; Danish: mave; Dhivehi: މައިދާ; Dutch: maag; Erzya: пеке; Esperanto: stomako; Estonian: kõht, magu; Finnish: mahalaukku, vatsalaukku; French: estomac; Friulian: stomi; Galician: estómago, calleiro, bandullo, ventrullo, maga; Georgian: კუჭი, სტომაქი, სტვამაქი; German: Magen; Greek: στομάχι; Ancient Greek: γαστήρ, καρδία, κοιλία, κοιλίη, μήτρα, νηδύς, στόμαχος; Greenlandic: naaq; Gujarati: જઠર, પેટ; Haitian Creole: vant; Hawaiian: ʻōpū; Hebrew: קיבה \ קֵבָה; Hindi: अमाशय, पेट, उदर; Hungarian: gyomor; Icelandic: magi; Ido: stomako; Igbo: afo; Indonesian: lambung, maag; Interlingua: stomacho; Iranun: tian; Irish: goile; Italian: stomaco; Japanese: 胃, 胃袋,お腹, 腹; Kalmyk: гесн; Kannada: ಹೊಟ್ಟೆ, ಉದರ; Kapampangan: dungus; Kashubian: żołǫdk; Kazakh: асқазан; Khmer: ក្រពះ; Kimaragang: tiyan; Komi-Korean: 위(胃); Kurdish Central Kurdish: گەدە; Northern Kurdish: gede; Kyrgyz: ашказан, курсак; Lakota: niǧé, thezí; Lao: ກະເພາະ, ທ້ອງ, ກະມະລະ; Latgalian: pasirds; Latin: alvus, venter, stomachus; Latvian: kuņģis; Ligurian: stéumago; Linngithigh: arra; Lithuanian: skrandis; Livonian: mag; Lombard: stomegh; Lotud: tian; Low German: Maag; Luganda: ssebusa; Luo: ich; Luxembourgish: Mo; Macedonian: желудник, стомак, мев; Malagasy: vavony; Malay: perut; Malayalam: ആമാശയം; Maltese: stonku; Manchu: ᡤᡠᠸᡝᠵᡳᡥᡝ; Mandinka: konoo; Maranao: tiyan; Marathi: जठर; Middle Persian: 𐭪𐭥𐭬𐭡, 𐭪𐭥𐭬𐭩𐭪𐭩; Mongolian: гэдэс; Navajo: abid; Nepali: पेट; Norman: estonma, estouma, estuma; Northern Sami: čoavji; Norwegian Bokmål: mage, magesekk, mavesekk; Nynorsk: mage, magesekk; Occitan: estomac; Odia: ଫଣ୍ଡ; Ojibwe: nimisad; Old Church Slavonic Cyrillic: желудъкъ; Old English: maga; Old Turkic: 𐰴𐰆𐰺𐰆𐰍𐰽𐰴; Oromo: garaacha; Ossetian: ахсӕн; Ottoman Turkish: معده, قورساق; Pashto: معده, ګېډه; Persian: معده, کم; Piedmontese: stòmi; Pitjantjatjara: tjuni kata; Plautdietsch: Moag; Polish: żołądek; Portuguese: estômago; Punjabi: ਢਿੱਡ; Romagnol: stómac; Romanian: stomac; Rungus: tizan; Russian: желудок, живот; Sabah Bisaya: tinai'; Saho: garba; Sanskrit: उदरम्, उदर; Sardinian: istogomo, istocomo; Scottish Gaelic: stamag, brù; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: желудац, стомак; Roman: želudac, stomak; Shan: တွင်ႉ; Sicilian: stòmmacu; Sinhalese: බඩ; Slovak: žalúdok; Slovene: želodec; Somali: calool; Sorbian Lower: žołdk; Upper: žołdk; Spanish: estómago; Sundanese: ᮘᮥᮛᮤᮂ; Swahili: utumbo; Swedish: mage, magsäck; Tagal Murut: tinaai; Tagalog: tiyan, sikmura; Tajik: меъда; Tambunan Dusun: tian; Tamil: இரைப்பை, வயிறு; Taos: thį̀ęʼéna; Tarifit: aɛeddis; Tatar: ашказан; Telugu: జీర్ణకోశము, జీర్ణాశయము; Ternate: gate; Thai: ท้อง, กระเพาะ, กระเพาะอาหาร; Tibetan: གྲོད་ཁོག; Tigrinya: ከስዐ; Timugon Murut: tinaie; Tooro: enda; Turkish: mide, karın, aşkazan; Turkmen: garyn, aşgazan; Tuvan: ижин; Ukrainian: шлунок, желудок, жолудок; Urdu: معدہ, پیٹ; Uyghur: ئاشقازان; Uzbek: qorin, oshqozon; Venetan: stòmego; Vietnamese: dạ dày, bao tử; Vilamovian: maoga; Volapük: stomäg; Walloon: stoumak; Welsh: stumog; West Coast Bajau: betong; West Frisian: mage; White Wiradjuri: binji; Wolof: biir, bàq; Xhosa: isisu; Yakut: куртах; Yami: vitoka; Yiddish: מאָגן; Yoruba: àpòòkùn, ikùn; Yup'ik: aqsaq; Zhuang: dungx; Zulu: isisu

belly

Afrikaans: maag; Aklanon: tiyan; Albanian: bark; Amharic: ሆድ; Arabic: بَطْن‎; Egyptian Arabic: بطن‎, كرش‎; Hijazi Arabic: بطن‎, كرشة‎; Moroccan Arabic: كرش‎; Aragonese: pancha; Armenian: փոր, որովայն; Aromanian: pãntic, pãnticã, bicã, foale; Ashkun: banī; Assamese: পেট; Asturian: barriga; Azerbaijani: göbək, qarın, qursaq; Baluchi: لاپ‎; Basque: sabel; Belarusian: жывот, бруха; Bengali: পেট; Breton: kof; Brunei Malay: parut; Bulgarian: корем, шкембе, тумбак; Burmese: ဗိုက်, ဝမ်း; Catalan: buc, abdomen, panxa, ventre; Cebuano: tiyan; Chepang: 'योङ्‌; Chichewa: mimba; Chinese Cantonese: 腹, 腹部, 肚; Dungan: дўзы; Hakka: 肚屎; Mandarin: 腹, 腹部, 肚子; Min Dong: 腹老; Mon ဗုင်ဂၞဴ; Min Nan: 腹, 腹肚; Wu: 肚皮; Classical Nahuatl: ihtetl; Coptic Bohairic: ϧⲏⲧ, ⲛⲉϫⲓ; Sahidic: ϩⲏ; Czech: břicho; Dalmatian: viantro; Danish: bug, mave; Dutch: buik; Esperanto: ventro; Estonian: kõht, vats; Even: ур; Evenki: ур; Faroese: búkur, magi; Finnish: maha, masu, vatsa; French: ventre; Friulian: vintri, panze, gradoan; Galician: bandullo, panza, boxo, andorga, barriga, tripa; Georgian: მუცელი; German: Bauch, Magen; Alemannic German: Büdel; Greek: κοιλιά; Ancient Greek: κοιλία, κοιλίη; Guaraní: py'a; Haitian Creole: vant; Hawaiian: ʻōpū; Hebrew: בֶּטֶן‎; Hindi: पेट, उदर; Hungarian: has; Icelandic: magi, malli; Indonesian: perut; Interlingua: pancia, ventre; Irish: bolg; Italian: pancia, ventre; Ivatan: vodek; Japanese: 胃, お腹, 腹; Javanese: weteng; Kapampangan: atian, atyan; Kashubian: brzëch; Kazakh: қарын, құрсақ, іш; Khmer: ក្រពះ, ពុង, ពោះ, ក្បាលពោះ; Kikuyu: nda; Korean: 배; Kurdish Central Kurdish: زگ‎, ورگ‎; Kyrgyz: курсак; Lao: ທ້ອງ, ໂພ່ນ; Latgalian: vādars; Latin: abdomen, venter, pantex; Latvian: vēders; Lezgi: руфун; Ligurian: pansa; Lithuanian: pilvas; Lombard: venter; Low German: Buuk; Macedonian: мев, стомак; Malay: perut; Maltese: żaqq; Manchu: ᡥᡝᡶᡝᠯᡳ; Maori: puku; Maranao: tiyan; Mongolian: гэдэс; Nanai: хэмдэ; Neapolitan: panza; Norman: ventre, vãtr; Northern Ohlone: hút̄u; Norwegian Bokmål: mage; Occitan: ventre; Ojibwe: nimisad; Old Church Slavonic: чрѣво, брюхо; Old English: wamb; Old French: ventre; Old Javanese: wĕtĕng; Oriya: ପେଟ, ଉଦର; Oromo: garaa; Ottoman Turkish: قارن‎, قارین‎, شكم‎, بطن‎; Pashto: نس‎, خېټه‎; Persian: شکم‎; Phoenician: 𐤁𐤈𐤍‎; Plautdietsch: Buck; Polish: brzuch; Portuguese: barriga, pança, ventre; Quechua: wiksa, pach'a; Canka Quechua: wiksa; Wanka Quechua: pata; Waiwaş Quechua: paca; Rajasthani: पैदौ; Romanian: burtă, abdomen, pântece, vintre; Romansch: venter, vainter; Russian: живот, брюхо, пузо; Rusyn: бріх; Sanskrit: उदर; Sardinian: bentre, bentri, brente, brenti; Scottish Gaelic: balg, brù; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: тр̀бух; Roman: tr̀buh; Sicilian: panza; Slovak: brucho; Slovene: trebuh; Sorbian Lower Sorbian: brjuch; Upper Sorbian: brjuch; Spanish: barriga, panza, vientre; Sranan Tongo: bere; Sudovian: vederas; Sundanese: beuteung, patuangan; Swedish: buk, mage; Tabasaran: фун; Tagalog: tiyan, puson; Tajik: шикам; Tamil: தொப்பை, தொந்தி; Tausug: tian; Telugu: పొట్ట, కడుపు; Tetum: kabun; Thai: ท้อง, พุง; Tibetan: ཕོ་བ; Tigrinya: ከብዲ; Tocharian B: kātso; Tok Pisin: bel; Turkish: göbek, karın; Turkmen: garyn; Ugaritic: 𐎋𐎗𐎒; Ukrainian: живі́т, брухо; Umbundu: imo; Urdu: پیٹ‎; Uyghur: قورساق‎; Uzbek: qorin; Venetian: pansa, pança; Vietnamese: bụng; Volapük: bälid; Walloon: vinte; Winnebago: nįįxa; Wolof: biir; Yiddish: בויך‎; Zealandic: buuk, poke; Zhuang: aendungx, dungx; Zulu: isisu

womb

Afrikaans: baarmoeder; Albanian: an, mitër; Arabic: رَحِم‎, بَيْت الْوَلِد‎; Moroccan Arabic: والدة‎; Armenian: արգանդ; Asturian: úteru; Azerbaijani: uşaqlıq, bətn; Belarusian: матка, чэ́рава; Bengali: জরায়ু; Breton: mamm; Bulgarian: матка, утроба; Burmese: သားအိမ်; Catalan: úter, matriu; Central Melanau: peranakan; Chinese Cantonese: 子宮, 子宫; Mandarin: 子宮, 子宫; Min Nan: 子宮, 子宫, 生囝袋; Classical Nahuatl: nānyōtl; Czech: děloha; Danish: livmoder; Dhivehi: ރަހިމު‎; Dutch: baarmoeder; Elfdalian: livmųoðer; Esperanto: utero; Estonian: emakas; Faroese: lívmóðir; Finnish: kohtu; French: utérus, ventre, matrice, sein, entrailles; Galician: útero, madre, ventre, seo, entrañas; Georgian: საშვილოსნოს; German: Gebärmutter; Uterus; Mutterleib, Schoß; Gothic: 𐍅𐌰𐌼𐌱𐌰, 𐌺𐌹𐌻𐌸𐌴𐌹; Greek: μήτρα; Ancient Greek: μήτρα, ὑστέρα, ὑστέρη, δελφύς, δελφύα, κοιλία, κοιλίη; Greenlandic: illiaq; Guaraní: ye; Gujarati: ગર્ભાશય; Hebrew: רֶחֶם \ רַחַם‎; Hindi: गर्भ, गर्भाशय; Hungarian: méh; Icelandic: leg, móðurlíf; Indonesian: rahim; Interlingua: utero, matrice; Irish: broinn; Italian: utero, grembo; Japanese: 子宮, 母胎; Kannada: ಗರ್ಭಕೋಶ; Kazakh: жатыр; Khmer: ស្បូន; Korean: 자궁(子宮); Kurdish Central Kurdish: مِناڵدان‎; Northern Kurdish: malzarok; Kyrgyz: жатын; Lao: ມົດລູກ; Latin: matrix, uterus, uterum; Latvian: dzemde; Lithuanian: gimda; Luxembourgish: Matrice, Gebärmutter, Uterus; Macedonian: матка, утроба; Malagasy: bobo, fananahana, vohoka; Malay: rahim, peranakan, kandung, kandungan, uterus; Malayalam: ഗര്‍ഭപാത്രം; Maltese: ġuf; Manx: brein; Maori: wharekano, wharekākano, wharetangata; Marathi: गर्भाशय; Middle English: matrice, maris, wombe; Mongolian: сав, умай, хэвлий; Navajo: iishchʼid; Nepali: पाठेघर; Norwegian Bokmål: livmor; Nynorsk: livmor; Old Church Slavonic Cyrillic: чрѣво; Old East Slavic: черево; Old English: innoþ, cwiþ, hrif, ċildhama; Pashto: رحم‎, توملنه‎, زيلان‎; Persian: رحم‎, زهدان‎, زاقدان‎; Polish: macica; Portuguese: útero, matriz; Quechua: kisma; Romanian: uter, matcă; Romansch: madra, uterus; Russian: матка, утроба, чрево; Rusyn: матка; Sami Inari: kuáhtu; Northern: mánágoahti, eatniheagga, goaŧŧu; Skolt: vuõbdd; Southern: boernesgåetie, jiemie; Sanskrit: गर्भ; Scottish Gaelic: machlag, broinn, brù; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: матерница, материца, утроба; Roman: maternica, materica, utroba; Slovak: maternica; Slovene: maternica; Sorbian Upper Sorbian: maćernica, rodźeńca; Spanish: útero, matriz; Sranan Tongo: bere; Sundanese: ᮕᮤᮃᮔᮊᮔ᮪; Swahili: nyumba ya uzazi, tumbo; Swedish: livmoder; Tagalog: bahay-bata, sinapupunan, matris, utero; Tajik: бачадон, раҳим, заҳдон; Tamil: கருப்பை; Telugu: గర్భం, గర్భాశయము; Thai: มดลูก; Tocharian B: kaläl, kātso; Tupinambá: ygé; Turkish: rahim, dölyatağı, uterus; Turkmen: ýatgy; Ugaritic: 𐎗𐎈𐎎; Ukrainian: матка, утроба, черево; Urdu: گربھ‎, رحم‎; Uyghur: بەچىدان‎, قارىن‎, ماتكا‎; Uzbek: bachadon, matka; Venetian: mare; Vietnamese: tử cung, dạ con; Volapük: vüm, motavüm; Welsh: croth; Old Welsh: gumbelauc; Yiddish: טראַכט‎, מוטערטראַכט‎, הייבמוטער