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who go about from village to village
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1 vicaneus
vīcānus (post-class. collat. form vī-cānĕus, Cod. Just. 11, 56), a, um, adj. [vicus], of or dwelling in a village.I.Adj.:II.Tmolites ille vicanus,
villager, Cic. Fl. 3, 8: haruspices, who go about from village to village, Enn. ap. Cic. Div. 1, 58, 132.— -
2 vicani
vīcānus (post-class. collat. form vī-cānĕus, Cod. Just. 11, 56), a, um, adj. [vicus], of or dwelling in a village.I.Adj.:II.Tmolites ille vicanus,
villager, Cic. Fl. 3, 8: haruspices, who go about from village to village, Enn. ap. Cic. Div. 1, 58, 132.— -
3 vicanus
vīcānus (post-class. collat. form vī-cānĕus, Cod. Just. 11, 56), a, um, adj. [vicus], of or dwelling in a village.I.Adj.:II.Tmolites ille vicanus,
villager, Cic. Fl. 3, 8: haruspices, who go about from village to village, Enn. ap. Cic. Div. 1, 58, 132.— -
4 vīcānus
vīcānus adj. [vicus], of a village: Tmolites ille, villager: haruspices, who go from village to village, Enn. ap. C.— Plur m. as subst, peasants, L.* * *Ivicana, vicanum ADJIIvillagers (pl.) -
5 vīcātim
vīcātim adv. [vicus], from village to village, in hamlets: habitare, L.—From street to street, through the streets: Vos turba vicatim hine et hinc saxis petens, H., Ta.* * *by (urban) districts, street by street; in or by villages -
6 vicatim
vīcātim, adv. [vicus].I.From street to street, through the streets, Sisenn. ap. Non. p. 188, 26; Suet. Caes. 41 med.; Tac. H. 2, 95; Hor. Epod. 5, 97.—II.From village to village, through the villages, in hamlets:habitare,
Liv. 9, 13, 7:dispersa,
Plin. 6, 26, 30, § 117. -
7 Circumcellio
Circumcellĭo, ōnis, m. [cella].I. II.A class of heretics, Hier. Ep. 22, 15; Isid. Orig. 8, 5, 53. -
8 circumforaneus
circum-fŏrānĕus, a, um, adj. [forum].* I.Of or around the forum or market-place: aes, debts due in the forum (because the bankers' shops were at the forum), Cic. Att. 2, 1, 11.—More freq.,II.Strolling about from market to market, that attends markets:B.pharmacopola,
Cic. Clu. 14, 40: lanista, * Suet. Vit. 12:medicabulum,
App. M. 9, p. 218, 41.—In gen., that is carried about, ambulatory, movable: domus, App. M. 4, p. 148, 29: hostiae, which are carried about for expiation (cf. circumfero, II. C.), App. M. 3, p. 130, 5. -
9 pererro
pĕr-erro, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a., to wander through, to roam or ramble over ( poet. and in post-Aug. prose).I.Lit.:II.fallacem circum vespertinumque pererro Saepe forum,
Hor. S. 1, 6, 113:locum,
Verg. A. 5, 441:freta,
Ov. H. 14, 103:saltus et fontes,
Val. Fl. 3, 537:orbem, Col. praef. 1: cellas,
Petr. 97:reges,
to roam about from one king to another, Sen. Q. N. 3 praef. § 6.— Pass.:arva pererrantur Peligna,
Ov. Am. 2, 16, 5:pererratus orbis,
id. F. 1, 234; cf.:pererrato ponto,
Verg. A. 2, 295.—Transf.:totumque pererrat Luminibus tacitis,
surveys all over, Verg. A. 4, 363:sonus pererrat cornua, i. e. errat per tubam,
Sil. 4, 174. -
10 castellum
castellum ī, n dim. [castrum], a castle, fort, citadel, fortress, stronghold: crebra, Cs.: castellis ab ingressione propulsari: multa capere, S.: montana castella, V.: castella communit, towers (on a wall), Cs.: castella facta, posts (for guards), Cs.— Poet.: Norica Castella in tumulis, i. e. mountain homes, V.—Fig., a shelter, stronghold, defence, refuge: latrocinii: castellum omnium scelerum, L.* * *redoubt, fortress, stronghold, fortified settlement, refuge; garrison, citadel; structure in which water from aqueduct is collected for distribution, reservoir town, village; (medieval) -
11 ager
ăger, gri, m. [agros; Germ. Acker, Eng. acre, Sanscr. agras = surface, floor; Grimm conjectured that it was connected with ago, agô, a pecore agendo, and this was the ancient view; cf. Varr. L. L. 5, § 34 Müll., and Don. ad Ter. Ad. 3, 3, 47; so the Germ. Trift = pasture, from treiben, to drive].I.In an extended sense, territory, district, domain, the whole of the soil belonging to a community (syn.: terra, tellus, arvum, solum, rus, humus; opp. terra, which includes [p. 70] many such possessions taken together; cf.II.Nieb. Röm. Gesch. 2, 694 sq.): Ager Tusculanus,... non terra,
Varr. L. L. 7, 2, 84:praedā atque agro adfecit familiares suos,
Plaut. Am. 1, 1, 38:abituros agro Achivos,
id. ib. 1, 53, 71:ut melior fundus Hirpinus sit, sive ager Hirpinus (totum enim possidet), quam, etc.,
Cic. Agr. 3, 2: fundum habet in agro Thurino, id. Fragm. ap. Quint. 4, 2, 131 (pro Tull. 14):Rhenus, qui agrum Helvetium a Germanis dividit,
Caes. B. G. 1, 2 Herz.:ager Noricus,
id. ib. 1, 5:in agro Troade,
Nep. Paus. 3:in agro Aretino,
Sall. C. 36, 1:his civitas data agerque,
Liv. 2, 16:in agro urbis Jericho,
Vulg. Josue, 5, 13.—In the Roman polity: ager Romanus, the Roman possessions in land (distinguished from ager peregrinus, foreign territory) was divided into ager publicus, public property, domains, and ager privatus, private estates; v. Smith's Dict. Antiq., and Nieb. Röm. Gesch. 2, 695 and 696; cf. with 153 sq.—In a more restricted sense.A.Improdued or productive land, a field, whether pasture, arable, nursery ground, or any thing of the kind; cf. Doed. Syn. 3, 7 sq.; 1, 71; Hab. Syn. 68, and Herz. ad Caes. B. G. 7, 13:* Of a piece of ground where vines or trees are planted, a nursery:agrum hunc mercatus sum: hic me exerceo,
Ter. Heaut. 1, 1, 94:agrum de nostro patre colendum habebat,
id. Phorm. 2, 3, 17:ut ager quamvis fertilis, sine culturā fructuosus esse non potest,
Cic. Tusc. 2, 5; id. Fl. 29:agrum colere,
id. Rosc. Am. 18:conserere,
Verg. E. 1, 73:agrum tuum non seres,
Vulg. Lev. 19, 19:(homo) seminavit bonum semen in agro suo,
ib. Matt. 13, 24; ib. Luc. 12, 16. —ut ager mundus purusque flat, ejus arbor atque vitis fecundior,
Gell.19, 12, 8.—Of a place of habitation in the country, estate, villa:B.in tuosne agros confugiam,
Cic. Att. 3, 15 (so agros, Hom. Od. 24, 205).—The fields, the open country, the country (as in Gr. agros or agroi), like rus, in opp. to the town, urbs (in prose writers generally only in the plur.), Ter. Eun. 5, 5, 2:C.homines ex agris concurrunt,
Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 44:non solum ex urbe, sed etiam ex agris,
id. Cat. 2, 4, 8:annus pestilens urbi agrisque,
Liv. 3, 6; id. 3, 32:in civitatem et in agros,
Vulg. Marc. 5, 14.—And even in opp. to a village or hamlet, the open field:sanum hominem modo ruri esse oportet, modo in urbe, saepiusque in agro,
Cels. 1, 1.—Poet., in opp. to mountains, plain, valley, champaign:D.ignotos montes agrosque salutat,
Ov. M. 3, 25.—As a measure of length (opp. frons, breadth):mille pedes in fronte, trecentos cippus in agrum Hic dabat,
in depth, Hor. S. 1, 8, 12. -
12 Andecavi
1.Andes, ium, or Andecāvi or Andicāvi, ōrum, m., a Gallic tribe in the region of the present Anjou, with a town of the same name, now Angors; form Andes, Caes. B. G. 2, 35.—Form Andecāvi, Tac. A. 3, 41.—Form Andi-cāvi, Plin. 4, 18, 32, § 107 Jan; cf. Mann. Gall. 163.2.Andes, is, m., a village near Mantua, the birthplace of Vergil, now Pietola; hence, Andīnus, a, um, of or from Andes:Andinus,
i. e. Vergil, Sil. 8, 595. -
13 Andes
1.Andes, ium, or Andecāvi or Andicāvi, ōrum, m., a Gallic tribe in the region of the present Anjou, with a town of the same name, now Angors; form Andes, Caes. B. G. 2, 35.—Form Andecāvi, Tac. A. 3, 41.—Form Andi-cāvi, Plin. 4, 18, 32, § 107 Jan; cf. Mann. Gall. 163.2.Andes, is, m., a village near Mantua, the birthplace of Vergil, now Pietola; hence, Andīnus, a, um, of or from Andes:Andinus,
i. e. Vergil, Sil. 8, 595. -
14 Andicavi
1.Andes, ium, or Andecāvi or Andicāvi, ōrum, m., a Gallic tribe in the region of the present Anjou, with a town of the same name, now Angors; form Andes, Caes. B. G. 2, 35.—Form Andecāvi, Tac. A. 3, 41.—Form Andi-cāvi, Plin. 4, 18, 32, § 107 Jan; cf. Mann. Gall. 163.2.Andes, is, m., a village near Mantua, the birthplace of Vergil, now Pietola; hence, Andīnus, a, um, of or from Andes:Andinus,
i. e. Vergil, Sil. 8, 595. -
15 Aurelius
I.A.. A Roman nomen, e. g. M. Aurelius Antoninus, L. Aurelius Cotta; hence,B.Esp.1.Aurelia Via, the Aurelian Way, made by a certain Aurelius, otherwise unknown;2.it consisted of two parts: VETVS ET NOVA,
Inscr. Orell. 3307; the former ran from the Porta Janiculensis (now Porta di S. Pancrazio) of the northern coast to Pisa, later to Arelate; the latter was a small branch which led from the Porta Aurelia (now Castel S. Angelo) four thousand paces, to the former The via vetus Cicero mentions in Cat. 2, 4, 6; Phil. 12, 9.—Aurelia lex.(α).Judiciaria, of the prœtor L. Aurelius Cotta (A. U. C. 684), acc. to which the Senatores, Equites, and Tribuni aerarii were invested with judicial power, Cic. Phil. 1, 8, 19 sq.; Vell. 2, 32; Ascon. ad Div. in Caecil. 3.—(β).De ambitu, [p. 207] of unknown origin, Cic. ad Q. Fr. 1, 3 fin. —3.Forum Aurelium, a town in Etruria, on the Via Aurelia, near the present village Castellacio, Cic. Cat. 1, 9, 24; cf. Mann. Ital. I. p. 370.—4.Aurelium tribunal, in the forum, of unknown origin (perh, made by L. Aurelius Cotta), Cic. Sest. 15; id. ad Quir. 5, 14;II.also called Gradus Aurelii,
id. Clu. 34, 93; id. Fl. 28.—Sextus Aurelius Victor, a Roman historian of the fourth century; cf. Bähr, Lit. Gesch. p. 342 sq.; Teuffel, Rom. Lit. § 408. -
16 Brauron
Brauron, ōnis, m. ( Braurōnia, ae, f., Mel. 2, 3, 6), = Braurôn, a village in Attica, not far from Marathon, now Vraona, Plin. 4, 7, 11, § 24; Stat. Th. 12, 615. -
17 Brauronia
Brauron, ōnis, m. ( Braurōnia, ae, f., Mel. 2, 3, 6), = Braurôn, a village in Attica, not far from Marathon, now Vraona, Plin. 4, 7, 11, § 24; Stat. Th. 12, 615. -
18 Carya
Căryae, ārum, f., = Karuai, a village in Laconia, with a temple of Diana Caryatis (now still Karyes), Liv. 34, 26, 9; 35, 27, 12. —In sing.: Cărya, Vitr. 1, 1, 5.—II.Hence,A. B.Căryā-tis, ĭdis, f., = Karuatis.1.An epithet of Diana, Serv. ad Verg. E. 8, 30.—2.Căry-ātĭdes, the maidens of Caryœ serving in the temple of Diana, a statue of Praxiteles, Plin. 36, 5, 4, § 23.—(β).In architecture, female figures used instead of columns in buildings, Caryatides, Vitr. 1, 1, 5 (v. the representation of such a Caryatide from the temple of Pallas Polias, at Athens, in O. Müller, Denkm. d. alt. Kunst, 101, and Dict. of Antiq.).—3. -
19 Caryae
Căryae, ārum, f., = Karuai, a village in Laconia, with a temple of Diana Caryatis (now still Karyes), Liv. 34, 26, 9; 35, 27, 12. —In sing.: Cărya, Vitr. 1, 1, 5.—II.Hence,A. B.Căryā-tis, ĭdis, f., = Karuatis.1.An epithet of Diana, Serv. ad Verg. E. 8, 30.—2.Căry-ātĭdes, the maidens of Caryœ serving in the temple of Diana, a statue of Praxiteles, Plin. 36, 5, 4, § 23.—(β).In architecture, female figures used instead of columns in buildings, Caryatides, Vitr. 1, 1, 5 (v. the representation of such a Caryatide from the temple of Pallas Polias, at Athens, in O. Müller, Denkm. d. alt. Kunst, 101, and Dict. of Antiq.).—3. -
20 Caryates
Căryae, ārum, f., = Karuai, a village in Laconia, with a temple of Diana Caryatis (now still Karyes), Liv. 34, 26, 9; 35, 27, 12. —In sing.: Cărya, Vitr. 1, 1, 5.—II.Hence,A. B.Căryā-tis, ĭdis, f., = Karuatis.1.An epithet of Diana, Serv. ad Verg. E. 8, 30.—2.Căry-ātĭdes, the maidens of Caryœ serving in the temple of Diana, a statue of Praxiteles, Plin. 36, 5, 4, § 23.—(β).In architecture, female figures used instead of columns in buildings, Caryatides, Vitr. 1, 1, 5 (v. the representation of such a Caryatide from the temple of Pallas Polias, at Athens, in O. Müller, Denkm. d. alt. Kunst, 101, and Dict. of Antiq.).—3.
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