Related Words
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adimo
ăd-ĭmo, ēmi, emptum, 3, v. a. [emo] (adempsit = ademerit, Plaut. Ep. 3, 2, 27), to take to one's sel...
A New Latin Dictionary by Charlton T. Lewis Ph.D. and Charles Short, LL. D.
adimō ēmī, ēmptus, ere
ad + emo, to take away, take from, deprive of : Multa ferunt anni commoda, Multa recedentes adimunt, H.: metum, T.: adimere aegritudinem hominibus, to free men from sorrow , T.: qui das adimisque dolores, H.: alcui civitatem, to deprive of civil rights : a Syracusanis quae ille dies reliquerat: Quid Caecilio dabit Romanus ademptum Vergilio?i. e. grant to Caecilius, yet deny to Vergil , H.: Qui adimunt diviti, rob , T.: adimam cantare severis, will forbid to write verses , H.— Of persons, to snatch away, carry off : hanc mihi adimet nemo, T.: puellas adimis leto, from death , H.: ademptus, dead , H.
ăd-ĭmo, ēmi, emptum, 3, v. a. [emo] (adempsit = ademerit, Plaut. Ep. 3, 2, 27), to take to one's sel...
A New Latin Dictionary by Charlton T. Lewis Ph.D. and Charles Short, LL. D.