capillatus

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

căpillātus, a, um, P. a. of capillor, not in use,

I having hair , hairy (cf. barbatus): adulescens bene capillatus, with a fine head of hair , Cic. Agr. 2, 22, 58; Suet. Vesp. 23: capillatior quam ante, Cic. Agr. 2, 5, 13.— As a designation of a primitive age (since the hair was not then shorn; v. barba and barbatus): (vinum) capillato diffusum consule, i.e. very old wine , Juv. 5, 30.—Prov.: fronte capillatā, post est occasio calva, Cato , Dist. 2, 26; cf. Phaedr. 5, 8, 1 sqq.—Subst.: căpillāti , ōrum, m., young aristocrats , Mart. 3, 57, 31.—

B Capillata vel capillaris arbor, a tree on which the Vestal virgins suspended their shorn hair , Paul. ex Fest. p. 57 Müll.; cf. Plin. 16, 44, 85, § 235.—

II Transf., of plants, consisting of slender fibres : radices, Plin. 19, 6, 31, § 98: folia, id. 16, 24, 38, § 90.

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