exodium

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

exŏdĭum, ii, n., = ἐξόδιον.

I Prop., a piece of a comic description ( a kind of dramatized satura ), for the most part attached to the Atellanae, but given , under the emperors , as a separate performance after tragedies , Liv. 7, 2, 11; Juv. 3, 175 Schol.; 6, 71; Suet. Tib. 45; id. Dom. 10; cf. Bernhardy Röm. Lit. 2 ed. p. 341.—

II Transf. beyond the scenic lang., a conclusion , end (ante- and post-class.): exodium est finis ... in exodio vitae ... ad exodium adducere or ducere, Varr. ap. Non. 27, 14 sq.; cf.: exodium exitum, Fest. p. 80 Müll. N. cr.; Hier. Ep. 128, 1.

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