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Headword | Definitions | Occurrences in the Aeneid |
---|---|---|
inviolābilis, e | (adj.), not to be violated, inviolable, certain, 11.363. |
1 |
invīsō, vīsī, vīsus, 3, a. | to come, or go to see; visit, 4.144, et al. |
3 |
invīsus, a, um | unseen, 2.574. |
2 |
invīsus, a, um | hated, hateful, odious, 1.387; (act.), inimical, an enemy, hostile, 11.364. |
14 |
invītō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to ask as a guest; to invite, 8.178; encourage, incite, 5.292. |
4 |
invītus, a, um | (adj.), unwilling, 6.460; unfriendly, 2.402. |
6 |
invius, a, um | without a way; trackless, inaccessible, impassable, 1.537; difficult, 3.383. |
5 |
inultus, a, um | (adj.), unavenged, 2.670. |
4 |
inumbrō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to cast a shade upon; overshadow; shade, 11.66. |
1 |
inundō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. and n. | to overflow, a., 10.24; n., 11.382; of an army, rush on, pour on, 12.280. |
3 |
invocō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to call upon; invoke, adore, 7.140. |
1 |
involvō, volvī, volūtus, 3, a. | to roll on or in; cast upon, 12.292; roll along, carry, 12.689; cover up, obscure, 3.198; conceal, involve, 6.100. |
8 |
inūtilis, e | (adj.), useless, 2.510; helpless, 10.794. |
3 |
Castrum Inuī | a town in Latium near Antium and Ardea, 6.775. |
1 |
iō! | (interj. of joy), ho, huzza! (of woe), oh! behold! woe is me! 7.400. |
1 |
Īō, ūs, f. | Io, daughter of Inachus, changed into a cow, watched by Argus, and again restored to her own form, and worshiped by the Egyptians as Isis, 7.789. |
1 |
Iollās, ae, m. | a Trojan, 11.640. |
1 |
Īonius, a, um | (adj.), Ionian, 3.671; subst., Īonium, iī, n., the Ionian sea, 3.211. |
1 |
Īonius, a, um | (adj.), Ionian, 3.671; subst., Īonium, iī, n., the Ionian sea, 3.211. |
2 |
Iōpās, ae, m. | a Carthaginian poet, 1.740. |
1 |
Īphitus, ī, m. | a Trojan warrior, 2.435. |
2 |
ipse, a, um | (gen. ipsīus, dem. pron.), self, used to emphasize substantives and pronouns expressed or understood; myself, thyself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, etc., freq.; sometimes equivalent to just, precisely, exactly, very, even, 5.767, et al.; denoting distinction or preëminence, 1.575, et al.; of one's self, spontaneously, 7.492, et al.; the whole as contrasted with the parts, 12.303. |
289 |
īra, ae, f. | anger, fury, wrath, freq.; resentment, hatred, 1.251; revengeful, wrathful thought, 2.575; curse, wrathful intent, 11.443; vengeance, 12.946; pl. angry passions, wrath, 1.4, et al.; personif., Īrae, ārum, f., the Demon of wrath, Wrath, 12.336. |
64 |
īra, ae, f. | anger, fury, wrath, freq.; resentment, hatred, 1.251; revengeful, wrathful thought, 2.575; curse, wrathful intent, 11.443; vengeance, 12.946; pl. angry passions, wrath, 1.4, et al.; personif., Īrae, ārum, f., the Demon of wrath, Wrath, 12.336. |
1 |
īrāscor, īrātus sum, 3, dep. n. | to be angry, furious; to show anger, 10.712; to collect rage, throw fury into, 12.104; to attack, 10.712. (īra) |
2 |
Īris, idis, f., acc. Īrim | Iris, the goddess of the rainbow, daughter of Thaumas and Electra, and messenger of the gods above, 4.694, et al. |
8 |
inremeābilis, e | (adj.), that can not be gone over again; not to be repassed, or retraced, 6.425; inextricable, 5.591. |
2 |
inreparābilis, e | (adj.), irrecoverable, irretrievable. |
1 |
inrīdeō, rīsī, rīsus, 2, n. and a. | to laugh at; deride, 5.272; set at naught, insult, 4.534. |
4 |
inrigō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to water; (fig.), diffuse, 1.692; pervade, 3.511. |
3 |
inrītō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to exasperate, provoke, 4.178. |
2 |
inritus, a, um | baffled in calculation or purpose; ineffectual, unavailing; useless, vain, 2.459. (2. in- and ratus) |
7 |
inrumpō, rūpī, ruptus, 3, n. and a. | to burst; w. acc., rush into, rush through, 11.879; w. dat., burst into, 6.528. |
5 |
inruō, ruī, 3, n. and a. | to rush in, break in, 2.757; rush on, 2.383; rush, 9.555. |
6 |
is, ea, id, gen. ēius | dem. pron. 1. Subst. (= 3d pers. pron.), he, she, it, they, 3.596, et al. 2.(adj.), that, this, those, these, 2.103, et al.; such, 1.529, et al. |
82 |
Ismara, ae, f. | a city al the foot of Ismarus, a mountain in Thrace, 10.351. |
1 |
Ismarus, ī, m. | a Maeonian, follower of Aeneas, 10.139. |
1 |
iste, ista, istud | dem. pron., properly relating to the second person, that of which you speak, or which pertains to you; that, this; such, 2.521. |
31 |
istīc | (adv.), there, in that place, where you are, 10.557. (iste) |
1 |
istinc | (adv.), from there, thence, from where you are, 6.389. (iste) |
1 |
ita | (adv.), thus, so, in such a manner, 4.533, et al.; in oaths, 9.208. (rel. to is) |
24 |
Italī, ōrum, m. | the Italians, 1.109. (Ītalia) |
17 |
Ītalia, ae (Ī by poetic (epic) license), f. | Italy, 1.2, et al. |
44 |
Ītalides, um, f. | Italian women; Italian nymphs, 11.657. (Italus) |
1 |
Italus, a, um | Italian, 3.440, et al.; subst., Italī, ōrum, m., the Italians, 1.109. (Ītalia) |
26 |
Italus, ī, m. | the ancient king from whom Italy was supposed to have been named, 7.178. |
1 |
iter, itineris, n. | a going; a journey, passage, voyage, 3.507, et al.; track, path, way, 1.370; course, 7.35. (eō) |
35 |
iterum | (adv.), a second time, again, freq.; iterumque iterumque, both again and again, again and again, 2.770. |
26 |
Ithaca, ae, f. | Ithaca, the island of Ulysses in the Ionian sea, 3.272. |
2 |
Ithacus, a, um | adj. (Ithaca), of Ithaca, Ithacan; subst., Ithacus, ī, m., the Ithacan, Ulysses, 2.104, et al. |
4 |
Itys, yos (acc. -ym), m. | a Trojan slain by Turnus, 9.574. |
1 |
iuba, ae, f. | the mane of a horse; of a serpent, 2.206; of a helmet, plume, crest, 2.412. |
6 |
iubar, aris, n. | brightness, radiance, of the sun, or of a star; the sun, morning, 4.130. |
1 |
iubeō, iussī (fut. perf. iussō for iusserō, 11.467), iussus, 2, a. | to order, request, usually w. inf., freq.; bid, 2.3; ask, invite, 1.708; will, wish, desire, 3.261; direct, enjoin, admonish, 3.697; persuade, advise, 2.37; to clear by command, 10.444; w. subj., 10.53. |
70 |
iūcundus, a, um | (adj.), pleasant, sweet, delightful, 6.363. |
1 |
iūdex, icis, c. | a judge, 6.431, et al. (iūs and rt. dic, say) |
1 |
iūdicium, iī, n. | a judgment, decision, 1.27, et al. (iūdex) |
1 |
iugālis, e | adj. (iugum), pertaining to the yoke; yoked together; matrimonial, nuptial, 4.16; subst., iugālēs, ium, m., yoked, or harnessed horses; a team, 7.280. |
6 |
iūgerum, ī, n. | a Roman acre, about five eighths of the English acre; a iuger, an acre, 6.596; pl., iūgera, um, acres, 6.596; fields, lands, ground. (rel. to iungō and iugum) |
1 |
iugō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to yoke; (fig.), join in marriage, unite, 1.345. (iugum) |
1 |
iugulō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to cut the throat; slay, slaughter, 11.199; immolate, 12.214. (iugulum) |
2 |
iugulum, ī, n. | the joining part; the throat, 10.415, et al. (rel. to iungō) |
4 |
iugum, ī, n. | a yoke, 3.542, et al.; a span, team, horses, 5.147, et al.; cross-bench, seat, bench, 6.411; of hills or mountains, summit, top, ridge, 1.498; mount, 7.799; brow of a hill, 8.236; (fig.), subjection, 10.78; pl., iuga, ōrum, (meton.), car, chariot, 6.804; 10.594. (rel. to iungō) |
27 |
Iūlius, iī, m. | Julius, the name of the Roman gens in which the family of Caesar was the most prominent, 6.789; applied to Augustus, 1.288. |
1 |
Iūlus, ī, m. | Iulus or Ascanius, son of Aeneas, 1.267, et freq. |
35 |
iūnctūra, ae, f. | a joining; joint, 2.464. (iungō) |
2 |
iungō, iūnxī, iūnctus, 3, a. | to join; unite, 1.73, et al.; clasp, 3.83; yoke, harness, 5.817; bind, tie, 8.485; connect, arrange, 3.451; ally, reconcile, 11.129; (w. sē understood), to join one's self to, reach, w. dat., 10.240; (with sibi), to join, 4.142; 11.145; p., iūnctus, a, um, joined, freq.; close together, equal, 5.157. |
36 |
Iūnō, ōnis, f. | Juno, the Sabine and Roman name for the wife and sister of Jupiter, daughter of Saturn, 1.4, et al.; Iūnō īnferna, the Juno of the lower world, Proserpine, 6.138. |
56 |
Iūnōnius, a, um | adj. (Iūnō), pertaining to Juno, under the influence of Juno; Juno's, 1.671. |
1 |
Iuppiter, Iovis, m. | Jupiter, son of Saturn and Rhea, and king of the gods, 1.223; Iuppiter Stygius, Pluto, 4.638. |
86 |
iūre | (adv.), with right, justly, 9.642. (iūs, iūris, n.) |
1 |
iūrgium, iī, n. | a lawsuit; a quarrel; reproof, 11.406. (iūrgō, dispute) |
2 |
iūrō, āvī, ātus, 1, n. and a. | to take an oath, 4.426; call to witness, swear by, w. prep. per, 6.458; w. acc. alone, 6.351; w. acc. of thing and person, 12.197. (iūs) |
7 |
iūs, iūris, n. | law, right, equity, justice, freq.; obligation, 2.157; pl., iūra, um, justice, 1.293; laws, courts, 1.426; rules, 1.731; dare iūra, to administer laws or justice; dispense laws, rule (perhaps also including the idea of enacting laws), 1.293. |
14 |
iussum, ī, n. | a thing ordered; command, injunction, order, 1.77, et al. (iubeō) |
22 |
iussus, ūs, m., only in abl. sing. (iubeō) | by command, order, decree, 2.247. |
1 |
iūstitia, ae, f. | righteousness, justice, equity, 1.523, et al. (iūstus) |
4 |
iūstus, a, um | adj. (iūs), righteous, just, 1.544, et al.; fair, equal, 1.508; subst., iūstum, ī, n., that which is just, meet, proper, sufficient, enough. |
11 |
Iūturna, ae, f. | a Naiad, sister of Turnus, 12.154, et al. |
13 |
iuvenālis, e | adj. (iuvenis), pertaining to youth; youthful, 2.518. |
4 |
iuvencus, a, um | adj. (iuvenis), young; subst., iuvencus, ī, m., a young bullock, 3.247, et al.; iuvenca, ae, f., a heifer, 8.208, et al. |
2 |
iuvencus, a, um | adj. (iuvenis), young; subst., iuvencus, ī, m., a young bullock, 3.247, et al.; iuvenca, ae, f., a heifer, 8.208, et al. |
16 |
iuvenis, e | (adj.), young; in the vigor or flower of life; young, youthful, freq.; subst., iuvenis, is, c., a young person, youth; young man, 1.321, et al. |
78 |
iuvenis, e | (adj.), young; in the vigor or flower of life; young, youthful, freq.; subst., iuvenis, is, c., a young person, youth; young man, 1.321, et al. |
3 |
iuventa, ae, f. | youthfulness; the age of youth; youth, 1.590, et al. (iuvenis) |
9 |
iuventās, ātis, f. | youthfulness; the age of youth; youthful vigor, 5.398. (iuvenis) |
2 |
iuventūs, ūtis, f. | youthfulness; the age of youth; collective, young people, the youth; warriors, 1.467. (iuvenis) |
25 |
iuvō, iūvī, iūtus, 1, a. and n. | to help, aid, assist, 1.571; delight; impers., iuvat, it is of use, it avails, helps, 10.56; pleases, delights, gratifies, 1.203. |
31 |
iūxtā | (adv. and prep. w. acc.), near, close, near by, 2.513; at the same time, 2.666; near to, 3.506. |
12 |
iūxtā | (adv. and prep. w. acc.), near, close, near by, 2.513; at the same time, 2.666; near to, 3.506. |
10 |
Ixīōn, onis, m. | the father of Pirithous, and king of the Lapithae, who was bound to an ever revolving wheel in Hades for offering violence to Juno, 6.601. |
1 |