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Headword Definitions Occurrences in the Aeneid Sort descending
adservō, āvī, ātus, 1, a.

to keep carefully; guard, watch, 2.763.

1
Alsus, ī, m.

a Rutulian shepherd, 12.304.

1
Athesis, is, m.

the Athesis, a river in the N.E. part of Upper Italy, 9.680.

1
adsimilis, e

(adj.), like, similar to, 6.603.

1
Arabs, abis, m.

an Arabian, 8.706.

1
alternō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. and n.

to do by turns; to alternate (attack) by turns; weigh or consider one thing after another, 4.287. (alternus)

1
antenna, ae, f.

a sail yard, 3.549.

1
altrīx, īcis, f.

a nurse; mother-, nurse-, native-, birth-, 3.273. (alō)

1
Hammōn, ōnis, m.

Jupiter, or Zeus Ammon, a god of Egypt and Libya, 4.198.

1
Arisba, ae, f.

a town in the Troad, 9.264.

1
arātor, ōris, m.

a plowman, 10.804. (arō)

1
amāracus, ī, m.

marjoram, 1.693.

1
appetō, īvī or iī, ītus, 3, a.

to push for; attack, assail, 11.277. (ad and petō)

1
Amastrus, ī, m.

a Trojan, 11.673.

1
Amathūs, ūntis, f.

a town of Cyprus, 10.51.

1
arista, ae, f.

the beard of wheat; a head of wheat.

2
abigō, ēgī, āctus, 3, a.

to drive off or away from, i.e. beyond (others in), 8.407; drive away, 11.261. (ab and agō)

2
audēns, entis

venturing, daring, 2.347; bold, brave, 10.284; (compar.), audentior, bolder, more boldly, 6.95.

2
augustus, a, um

(adj.), venerable, 7.153; the surname given to Octavius Caesar by the senate, B.C. 27, and, after him, to the emperors generally, 6.792.

2
Aunus, ī, m.

an Italian chief, 11.700.

2
abripiō, ripuī, reptus, 3, a.

to take away violently; snatch, carry away, 1.108; 4.600. (ab and rapiō)

2
abrumpō, rūpī, ruptus, 3, a.

to break off, away, or tear away from, 9.118; tear asunder, rend, 3.199; end suddenly or abruptly, 4.388; put an end to, 4.631; violate, 3.55; p. abruptus, a, um, having burst, bursting, breaking forth, subst., abruptum, ī, n., anything broken off; a precipice; abyss, chasm, 3.422; in abruptum, headlong, 12.687.

2
abscondō, condī and condidī, ditus, 3, a.

to put out of sight, hide, conceal; to conceal, 4.337; lose sight of, withdraw from, 3.291.

2
absēns, entis

(adj.), absent, 4.83. (absum)

2
abstineō, uī, tentus, 2, a. and n.

to hold or keep off from, or abstain from, with abl., 7.618; alone; abstain, restrain one's self, 2.534. (abs and teneō)

2
ancīle, is, n.

a small oval shield, 7.188; pl., ancīlia, ium, the sacred ancilia, made by the Romans in imitation of the ancile which came down from heaven, 8.664.

2
avārus, a, um

adj. (aveō, desire), desirous of gain; greedy; covetous, avaricious, 1.363; rapacious, devouring, (fig.), of the land ruled over by an avaricious prince, 3.44.

2
acanthus, ī, m.

the plant bear's-foot; the acanthus, 1.649.

2
astus, ūs, m.

cunning; abl. astū, with cunning, craftily, 10.522.

2
atrox, ōcis

adj. (āter), cruel, fierce, relentless, 1.662.

2
accessus, ūs, m.

a going near to; an access, approach, 3.570. (accēdō)

2
accīdō, cīdī, cīsus, 3, a.

to cut into, or up; cut, 2.627; eat into, devour, consume, 7.125. (ad and caedō)

2
Antōrēs, ae, m.

a Greek warrior, follower of Evander, 10.778.

2
acciō, cīvī, cītus, 4, a.

to summon, call, 11.235. (ad and cieō)

2
ambūrō, ussī, ūstus, 3, a.

to burn round; p., ambūstus, a, um, blazing, singed, 12.301.

2
accurrō, currī, seldom cucurrī, cursus, 3, n.

to run to; run, hasten up, 5.451. (ad and currō)

2
amīcitia, ae, f.

friendship; pl., friendly alliance, 11.321. (amīcus)

2
adsēnsus, ūs, m.

an assenting; answering sound, response, echo, applause, 10.97. (adsentiō)

2
Achaemenidēs, ae, m.

Achaemenides, a companion of Ulysses, 3.614.

2
Achāicus (poet., Achāius), a, um

of Achaia; Achaean; Greek, 2.462. (Achāia)

2
Argus (Argos), ī, m.

a guest of Evander, 8.346; Argus, the hundred-eyed keeper who was made the guard of Io, after she was changed into a heifer by Juno, 7.791.

2
Acoetēs, is, m.

the armor-bearer of Evander, 11.30.

2
Aconteus, eī, m.

a Latin warrior, 11.612.

2
Ācrōn, ōnis, m.

a Greek warrior, 10.719.

2
āctus, ūs, m.

a driving or impelling; speed, swift descent, 12.687. (agō)

2
aprīcus, a, um

adj. (aperiō), open to the sun; sunny; sun-loving, 5.128.

2
acus, ūs, f.

a needle, 9.582. (acuō)

2
angō, ānxī, ānctus or ānxus, 3, a.

to squeeze, compress, 8.260.

2
augustus, a, um

(adj.), venerable, 7.153; the surname given to Octavius Caesar by the senate, B.C. 27, and, after him, to the emperors generally, 6.792.

2
admīror, ātus sum, 1, dep. a.

to admire, 6, 408; wonder, 2, 797.

2
admittō, mīsī, missus (pass inf. admittier, 9.231), 3, a.

to allow to go to a place; to admit, 6.330.

2
adorior, ortus sum, 4, dep. a.

to rise toward or upon, to approach; to aim at, undertake, attempt, 6.397.

2
Argīvus, a, um

adj. (Argos), belonging to Argos; Argive; Greek, 2.254; subst., Argīvī, ōrum, Argives, Greeks, 1.40.

2
adversus (-um)

(adv.), opposite to , against , to , or toward a thing, in a friendly or hostile sense.

2
Aulestēs, is, m.

an Etruscan chief, 10.207.

2
adulter, erī, m.

an adulterer, 11.268.

2
advocō, āvī, ātus, 1, a.

to call; summon, 5.44.

2
āridus, a, um

adj. (āreō), dry, parched, 5.200; thirsty.

2
Aegaeus, a, um

(adj.), Aegaean; pertaining to the Aegaean, 3.74.

2
aeger, gra, grum

(adj.), indisposed; of the body, not well, suffering, sick, 5.651; wounded, 10.856; heavy, difficult, 5.432; feeble, 9.814; fainting, trembling, 5.468; wearied, exhausted, 2.566; of the mind, careworn, wretched, weary, sorrow-laden, 2.268; grieved, afflicted, desponding, oppressed, 1.208; heartbroken, 1.351; 4.389; of inanimate things, sickly, 3.142.

2
aegis, idis, f.

the shield of Jupiter, carried also by Pallas; the aegis, 8.354.

2
Aegyptos (-tus), ī, f.

Egypt.

2
Astyanax, actis, m.

Astyanax, the son of Hector and Andromache, put to death by Ulysses after the capture of Troy, to prevent the fulfillment of the prophecy which said that Troy should be restored by him, 2.457.

2
Astur, uris, m.

Astur, an Etruscan chief, 10.180.

2
armātī, ōrum, m.

armed men, warriors, 2.485. (armō)

2
Aeolia, ae, f.

Aeolia, an island near Sicily, the home of Aeolus, 1.52.

2
asȳlum, ī, n.

1. A place of refuge; an asylum; a temple, sanctuary, 2.761. 2. The Asylum established by Romulus on the Capitoline, 8.342.

2
aequaevus, a, um

adj. (aequus and aevum), of equal age, 2.561.

2
aequālis, e

adj. (aequō), equal; of the same age, 10.194; fellow, companion; subst., c., companion, 5.468.

2
aequē

adv. (aequus), equally; alike.

2
Arcēns, entis, m.

Arcens, a Sicilian, 9.581.

2
aequum, ī, n.

that which is even; right, justice, 2.427; in aequum, to the open field, 9.68.

2
annus, ī, m.

a year, freq.; a season, portion of the year; māgnus annus, a complete year, or the great annual circuit of the sun, 3.284.

2
adsiduē

adv. (adsiduus), persistently, perpetually, constantly, 4.248.

2
aethra, ae, f.

the cloudless air; serene sky; heaven, 3.585, et al.

2
ārdēscō, ārsī, 3, inc. n.

to begin to burn; (fig.), burn, 1.713; to increase, grow louder and louder, 11.607. (ārdeō)

2
Atys, yos, m.

a young comrade of Ascanius, 5.568.

2
artus, a, um

(adj.), straitened, narrow; close, tight, 1.293.

2
adflīctus, a, um

dejected, desponding, 2.92; wretched, troubled, 1.452. (adflīgō, flīxī, flīctus, 3, a.)

2
Arcadia, ae, f.

the central country of Peloponnesus, 5.299.

2
Averna, ōrum, n.

Avernus, a lake near Naples, between Baiae and Cumae, in Campania, now Lago d’ Averno. Near it was one of the entrances to Hades; hence, the lower world 3.442, 5.732.

2
agglomerō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. and n.

to gather, assemble, crowd to, 2.341; sē agglomerāre, to join themselves to, 12.458. (ad and glomerō)

2
Amphitryōniadēs, ae, m.

Hercules, the son of Amphitryon (so called, though he was the son of Jupiter by the wife of Amphitryon), 8.103.

2
agna, ae, f.

a ewe lamb, 5.772. (agnus)

2
avītus, a, um

adj. (avus), of a grandfather; ancestral, ancient, 10.752.

2
Agyllīnus, a, um

(adj.), of Agylla, a town in Etruria, afterwards called Caere, 7.652; subst., Agyllīnī, ōrum, m., the people of Agylla, 12.281.

2
Aiāx, ācis, m.

1. Ajax, the son of Telamon. 2. Ajax, the son of Oileus, called also Ajax the Lesser, 1.41; 2.414.

2
albēscō, 3, inc. n.

to grow white, whiten; to brighten, dawn, 4.586. (albeō)

2
Alcānor, oris, m.

1. Alcanor, a Trojan hero, 9.672. 2. A Rutulian, 10.338.

2
ālipēs, edis

adj. (āla and pēs), wing-footed, 12.484; subst. m., wing-footed horse.

2
aliquandō

adv. (alius and quandō), at some time; formerly, 8.602; at length, 8.200.

2
adsimulō, āvī, ātus, 1, a.

to make like; to counterfeit, feign, 10.639; (pass.), make one’s self like, 12.224.

2
adligō, āvī, ātus, 1, a.

to tie or bind to; hold fast, hold, 1, 169; constrain, confine, 6, 439.

2
Atīnas, ātis, m.

Atinas, a Latin chief, 12.661.

2
Almō, ōnis, m.

a Latin youth, son of Tyrrheus, 7.532.

2
ambedō, ēdī, ēsus, 3, a.

to eat round; to consume, devour, eat, 3.257.

2
adsistō, adstitī, 3, n.

to stand at, by, or present; stand, 12.790.

2
appellō, āvī, ātus, 1, a.

to address; name, designate, call, 5.540. (1. appellō)

2
Amasēnus, ī, m.

the Amasenus, a river of Latium, 11.547; the river-god Amasenus, 7.685.

2
arboreus, a, um

adj. (arbor), pertaining to a tree or trees; tree-like, massive, 12.888; branching, 1.190.

2