iniuria

An Elementary Latin Dictionary

iniūria ae, f

iniurius, an injustice, wrong, outrage, injury, insult : (filius) carens patriā ob meas iniurias, harsh treatment , T.: paterna, T.: iniuriam sibi imponere: privatas iniurias ultus est, Cs.: in populumR., L.: a praetore iniurias accipere: imperatoris iniurias defendere, Cs.: Suebos ab Cheruscis iniuriis prohibere, protect from outrage on the side of , etc., Cs.: neque cuiquam iniuriae suae parvae videntur, his wrongs , S.: Turni, threatened by , V.: vos nostrae iniuria caedis subigat, etc., i. e. as its punishment , V.: tantine iniuria cenae? the insult of a dinner , Iu.: Helvetiorum iniuriae populiR., to Rome , Cs.: quarum (mulierum), L.: spretae formae, V.: thalami nostri, O.—In law, unlawful violence, assault, trespass : iniuriarum mihi scripta dica, T.: iniuriarum damnatus.—In language, an insult, affront, abuse : me onerare iniuriis, T.—With per : servos abducebat per iniuriam, unjustly, outrageously : per summam iniuriam.—Abl, unjustly, undeservedly, causelessly, wrongfully : me meis civibus iniuriā suspectum videre: non iniuriā (gaudebas), T.— An unjust acquisition : ad obtinendam iniuriam, L.— A damage, harm, injury : Curandum ne magna iniuria fiat Fortibus, Iu.