Related Words
-
cieo
cĭĕo, cīvi, cĭtum, 2 (from the primitive form cĭo, cīre, prevailing in the compounds accio, excio, e...
A New Latin Dictionary by Charlton T. Lewis Ph.D. and Charles Short, LL. D.
cieō cīvī, citus, ēre
1 CI-, to cause to go, move, stir, drive : natura omnia ciens et agitans: animal motu cietur suo: imo aequora fundo, stirs up , V : alquos e municipiis, Ta.: puppes sinistrorsum citae, H.—In law: ciere erctum, to divide the inheritance .—Fig., to put in motion, rouse, disturb : aurae cient (mare), L.: tonitru caelum omne ciebo, V.— To call by name, name, call, invoke . magnā supremum voce ciemus, i. e. utter the last invocation to the Manes , V.: numina, O.: triumphum nomine, i. e. to call Io triumphe! L.: patrem, i. e. show one's free birth , L.— To summon, rouse, stir, call . ad arma, L.: aere viros, V.: ad sese alqm, Ct.: ille cieri Narcissum postulat, Ta.— To call upon for help, invoke, appeal to : nocturnos manes, V.: vipereas sorores, the Furies , O.: foedera et deos, L.— To excite, stimulate, rouse, enliven, produce, cause, occasion, begin : motūs: tinnitūs aere, Ct.: fletūs, V.: murmur, V.: pugnam, L.: pugnam impigre, Ta.: bellum, L.: belli simulacra, V.: tumultum, L.: Martem, V.
cĭĕo, cīvi, cĭtum, 2 (from the primitive form cĭo, cīre, prevailing in the compounds accio, excio, e...
A New Latin Dictionary by Charlton T. Lewis Ph.D. and Charles Short, LL. D.