caudex

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

caudex, ĭcis, m. (more recent orthography cōdex) [etym. dub.; cf. cauda].

I The trunk of a tree , the stock , stem (rare).

α Caudex, Plin. 16, 30, 53, § 121; 12, 15, 34, § 67; Verg. G. 2, 30 et saep.—

β Codex, Ov. M. 12, 432; Col. 4, 8, 2; 5, 6, 21.— Hence,

B The block of wood to which one was bound for punishment : codex, Plaut. Poen. 5, 3, 39; Prop. 4 (5), 7, 44; Juv. 2, 57. —

C A term of reproach, block , dolt , blockhead : caudex, Ter. Heaut. 877; Petr. 74.—

II Inpartic.

A A block of wood split or sawn into planks , leaves or tablets and fastened together : quia plurium tabularum contextus caudex apud antiquos vocatur, Sen. Brev. Vit. 13, 4: quod antiqui pluris tabulas conjunctas codices dicebant, Varr. ap. Non. p. 535, 20.—Hence,

B (Since the ancients orig. wrote upon tablets of wood smeared with wax.) A book , a writing (its leaves were not, like the volumina, rolled within one another, but, like those of our books, lay over one another; cf. Dict. of Antiq.).

α Caudex, Cato ap. Front. Ep. ad M. Ant. 1, 2.—

β Codex, Cic. Verr. 2, 1, 46, § 119; id. Clu. 33, 91; Quint. 10, 3, 28; Dig. 32, 1, 52 al.—

C Esp. of an accountbook and particularly of a ledger (while adversaria signifies the waste-book; hence only the former was of any validity in law): non habere se hoc nomen ( this item ) in codice accepti et expensi relatum confitetur: sed in adversariis patere contendit, etc., Cic. Rosc. Com. 2, 5; v. the passage in connection; cf. id. ib. 3, 9: in codicis extremā cerā (i. e. upon the last tablet ), id. Verr. 2, 1, 36, § 92: referre in codicem, id. Sull. 15, 44.—

D A code of laws : Codex Theodosianus, Justinianus, etc.; cf. Dict. of Antiq. s. v.

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