trabeatus

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

trăbĕātus, a, um, adj. [1. trabea], dressed in or wearing a trabea.

I Adj. : Quirinus, Ov. F. 1, 37; id. M. 14, 828: equites, Tac. A. 3, 2; Suet. Dom. 14; Val. Max. 2, 2, 9; for which also agmina, the knights , Stat. S. 4, 2, 32: domus, i. e. of a consul , Claud. Cons. Mall. Theod. 338; so, colonus, i. e. consul , id. IV. Cons. Hon. 417: quies, of the consuls , Cod. Th. 10, 10, 33. —

II Subst.: trăbĕ-āta , ae, f. (sc. fabula), a kind of drama , so called by C. Melissus, prob. from the knights represented in it, Suet. Gram. 21.

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