adiuto

A New Latin Dictionary by Charlton T. Lewis Ph.D. and Charles Short, LL. D.

adjūto, āvi, ātum, 1, v. freq. [adjuvo] (ante-class.; esp. in Plaut. and Terence, and in later Lat.),

to help , to be serviceable to , to assist : aliquem, Att. ap. Non. 424, 2: istocine pacto me adjutas? Plaut. Ps. 1, 1, 81; id. Cas. 3, 3, 17; id. Truc. 2, 5, 26; 2, 7, 8: Pamphilum, Ter. And. 209; id. Heaut. 416; 546; id. Ad. prol. 16; id. Phorm. 34: funus, id. ib. 99.—With two acc.: id adjuta me, quo id fiat facilius, Ter. Eun. 150.—With dat. pers. : adjuta mihi, Pac. ap. Don. ad Ter. Ad. prol. 16; cf. Ruhnk. ad Ter. Hec. 359.—Also on a coin: deus adjuta Romanis, Eckh. D. N. 8, p. 223: saltem nobis adjutāsses, Petr. Fragm. Trag. 62 Burm.— Pass. : adjutamur enim atque alimur certis ab rebus, Lucr. 1, 812.

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