Frieze's Aeneid Vocabulary List
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Headword | Definitions | Occurrences in the Aeneid Sort ascending |
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lāpsō, āre, freq. n. | to fall down; slip, 2.551. (1. lābor) |
1 |
largior, ītus sum, 4, dep. | to give largely; bestow, grant, 10.494. (largus) |
1 |
Lārīna, ae, f. | a follower of Camilla, 11.655. |
1 |
Lātōnia, ae, f. | Diana, 11.534. |
1 |
lātrātor, ōris, m. | one who barks like a dog; a barker, the barking, 8.698. (lātrō) |
1 |
latrō, ōnis, m. | a hired servant, mercenary soldier, huntsman, 12.7. |
1 |
lautus, a, um | washed; neat, elegant; stately, magnificent, 8.361. (lavō) |
1 |
lēctus, ī, m. | a gathering, as of boughs, leaves, straw, etc.; a couch, 4.496. (legō, to gather) |
1 |
Lēda, ae, f. | wife of Tyndarus, and mother of Castor and Pollux, and of Helen and Clytemnestra, 1.652. |
1 |
lēgifer, era, erum | adj. (lēx and ferō), law-bringing, law-giving, 4.58. |
1 |
Leleges, um, m. | Pelasgian tribes of Asia Minor and Greece, 8.725. |
1 |
Lēmnius, a, um | (adj.), pertaining to Lemnos, an island in the Aegean Sea; the home of Vulcan; Lemnian, 8.454. |
1 |
Lēnaeus, a, um | (adj.), pertaining to the wine press; Bacchic, Lenaean, 4.207. |
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lentō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to make flexible; of oars, bend, ply, 3.384. (lentus) |
1 |
lepus, oris, m., and epicene | a hare, 9.563, et al. |
1 |
Lernaeus, a, um | adj. (Lerna), of Lerna, Lernaean, 8.300. |
1 |
levāmen, inis, n. | an alleviation; relief, mitigation; solace, 3.709. (2. levō) |
1 |
lēvō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to make smooth, polish, 5.306. (1. lēvis) |
1 |
Leucaspis, is, m. | Leucaspis, a companion of Aeneas, 6.334. |
1 |
lībāmen, inis, n. | a libation; sacrifice, offering, 6.246. (lībō) |
1 |
Līber, erī, m. | Liber, the god of wine and hilarity, identified by the Romans with the Greek Bacchus, 6.805, et al. |
1 |
liber, brī, m. | the rind; inner bark of a tree. |
1 |
libet, uit or libitum est, 2 | (impers.), it pleases, is agreeable to, is one's pleasure, will, mind. |
1 |
lībum, ī, n. | a cake of meal, oil, and honey, used in sacrifice. (lībō) |
1 |
Liburnī, ōrum, m. | the Liburni or Liburnians, a warlike people, inhabiting Liburnia, near the head of the Adriatic Sea on the Illyrian coast, 1.244. |
1 |
licenter | (adv.), without restraint, freely, 7.557. (licēns), (comp. licentius) |
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Lichās, ae, m. | a Latin slain by Aeneas, 10.315. |
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licitus, a, um, | allowed, allowable; free, 8.468. (liceō) |
1 |
Licymnia, ae, f. | Licymnia, a slave, 9.546. |
1 |
ligō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to tie, fasten, bind, 2.217; with in, encumber, 10.794. |
1 |
Ligus, uris, m. | a Ligurian; inhabitant of Liguria, the modern Piedmont; pl., Ligurēs, um, the Ligurians, 10.185. |
1 |
Lilybēius, a, um | adj. (Lilybaeum), of Lilybaeum, the western promontory of Sicily; Lilybaean, 3.706. |
1 |
limbus, ī, m. | a border, hem, fringe, 4.137. |
1 |
līmōsus, a, um | full of mud; miry, slimy, 2.135. (līmus) |
1 |
līmus, ī, m. | mud, mire, slime, 6.416. |
1 |
linteum, ī, n. | linen cloth; sailcloth; a sail, 3.686. (līnum) |
1 |
līnum, ī, n. | flax or hemp. |
1 |
Liparē, ēs, f. | Lipara or Lipare, one of the Aeolian Islands, N.E. of Sicily, 8.417. |
1 |
liquēscō, licuī, 3, inc. n. | to become fluid or liquid; melt, 8.446. (liqueō) |
1 |
liquidus, a, um | adj. (liqueō), flowing, liquid, fluid, 5.217, et al.; clear, serene, 6.202. |
1 |
Līris, is, m. | an Etruscan warrior, 11.670. |
1 |
līs, lītis, f. | a strife, contest, dispute, 12.898. |
1 |
līveō, 2, n. | to be bluish, pallid, livid, 7.687. |
1 |
līvidus, a, um | adj. (līveō), lead-colored, livid, dusky, 6.320. |
1 |
longinquus, a, um | adj. (longus), far distant, in space or time; distant, remote, long, 3.415. |
1 |
loquēla, ae, f. | a talking; speech; a word, 5.842. (loquor) |
1 |
lūbricus, a, um | (adj.), smooth, slippery, 2.474; (fig.), subtle, cunning, slippery, 11.716; subst., lūbrica, ōrum, n., a slippery place, 5.335. |
1 |
Lūcās, ae, m. | a follower of Turnus, 10.561. |
1 |
lūceō, lūxī, 2, n. | to shine, beam, gleam, glisten, 10.137, et al.; to be exposed to view, show, 11.693. |
1 |
Lūcetius, iī, m. | a Latin slain by Ilioneus, 9.570. |
1 |
lūctāmen, inis, n. | a striving; toil, 8.89. (lūctor) |
1 |
lūctificus, a, um | adj. (lūctus and faciō), causing grief; woe-bearing, 7.324. |
1 |
lūctus, ūs, m. | a mourning; sorrow, grief, woe, lamentation, 2.298, and freq.; personif., 6.274. (lūgeō) |
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lūdibrium, iī, n. | a mocking; mockery, sport, 6.75. (lūdō) |
1 |
lūdicer, cra, crum | adj. (lūdus), sportive; vain, trivial, 12.764. |
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lūgubrē | (adv.), mournful, mournfully, dismally, ominously, 10.273. (lūgubris,(adj.), mournful) |
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Lupercal, cālis, n. | the Lupercal, a cave on the Palatine at Rome, sacred to Lupercus or Pan, 8.343. |
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Lupercī, ōrum, m. | priests of Lupercus or Lycean Pan, 8.663. |
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lūstrālis, e | adj. (lūstrum), pertaining to the lustrum; expiatory, 8.183. |
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lūteus, a, um | adj. (lūtum, a plant yielding a yellow dye), yellowish; gold-colored, saffron-hued, 7.26. |
1 |
lūxuriō, āvī, ātus, 1, n., and lūxurior, ātus sum, 1, dep. n. | to luxuriate, foll. by ablat.; to abound, be full; rejoice, 11.497. (lūxuria, abundance) |
1 |
Lycaeus, a, um | of Lycaeus, a mountain in Arcadia noted for the worship of Zeus and Pan, Lycaean, 8.344. |
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Lycāōn, ōnis, m. | a Gnossian or Cretan maker of arms, 9.304. |
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Lycāonius, a, um | (adj.), of Lycaonia, a country of Asia Minor, 10.749. |
1 |
lychnus, ī, m. | a lamp, light, 1.726. |
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Lyciī, ōrum, m. | the Lycians, 1.113. |
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Lyctius, a, um | of Lyctus, a town in Crete; Lyctian, Cretan, 3.401. |
1 |
Lycūrgus, ī, m. | son of Dryas, and king of the Thracian Edoni, punished by Bacchus with madness, and driven to self-destruction, on account of his opposition to the Bacchanalian orgies, 3.14. |
1 |
Lӯdī, ōrum, m. | the people of Lydia; the Lydians; Etruscans, descendants of the Lydians, 9.11. (from the adj. Lӯdus, a, um, used as subst.) |
1 |
lymphō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. and n. | to dilute with water; to craze; p., lymphātus, a, um, mad, distracted, frenzied, furious, 7.377. (lympha) |
1 |
Lynceus (dissyll.), eī, m. | one of the companions of Aeneas, 9.768. |
1 |
lynx, lyncis, c. | a lynx, 1.323, et al. |
1 |
Lyrnēsius, a, um | adj. (Lyrnēsus), of Lyrnesus; Lyrnesian, 10.128. |
1 |
Lyrnēsus, ī, f. | Lyrnesus or Lyrnessus, a town in the Troad, 12.547. |
1 |
Machāōn, onis, m. | a Greek prince, surgeon of the Greeks at Troy, and said to have been the son of Aesculapius, 2.263. |
1 |
maciēs, ēī, f. | emaciation, leanness; ghastliness, 3.590. |
1 |
māctus, a, um | (adj.), only used in nom. and vocat., honored; voc., mācte, well done! go on! 9.641. |
1 |
madefaciō, fēcī, factus, 3, a.; (pass.), madefīō, factus sum, fierī | to make wet, to wet, moisten, 5.330. (madeō and faciō) |
1 |
madēscō, maduī, 3, inc. n. | to become wet; drip, be drenched, 5.697. (madeō) |
1 |
Maeander, drī, m. | a river of Ionia, famous for its windings; met., a winding; a waving or winding border, 5.251. |
1 |
Maeōn, onis, m. | Maeon, a Rutulian, 10.337. |
1 |
Maeonia, ae, f. | the ancient name of Lydia, the country in Asia Minor whence emigrated the Tyrrhenians or Etruscans to Italy; hence, for Etruria, 8.499. |
1 |
Maeonidae, ārum, m. | Maeonians or Lydians; people of Lydian descent; hence, Tyrrhenians or Etrurians, Etruscans, 11.759. |
1 |
Maeōtius, a, um | adj. (Maeōtae), pertaining to the Maeotae, or Scythians on the Palus Maeotis, or Sea of Azof; Maeotian, 6.799. |
1 |
magis, and short form, mage | (adv.), in a greater measure; more, 5.94; 10.481; the more, 7.787; for potius, by preference, rather, 5.29; better, 4.452. (rel. to māgnus) |
1 |
magicus, a, um | (adj.), pertaining to magi, or magicians; magic, 4.493. |
1 |
magistrātus, ūs, m. | magistracy; a civil officer, magistrate, 1.426. (magister) |
1 |
māgnum | (adv.), largely, widely, greatly, loudly, 9.705. |
1 |
Magus, ī, m. | a Rutulian, 10.521. |
1 |
māiestās, ātis, f. | greatness; majesty, dignity, authority, power, 12.820. (māgnus, māius) |
1 |
Malea, ae, f. | one of the southern promontories of Peloponnesus, 5.193. |
1 |
malesuādus, a, um | adj. (male and suādeō), crime-impelling; desperate, 6.276. |
1 |
mālifer, era, erum | fruit-producing, fruitful, 7.740. |
1 |
manifēstē | (adv.), manifestly; comp., manifēstius, more plainly, evidently, clearly, 8.16. (manifēstus) |
1 |
Mānlius, iī, m. | M. Manlius Capitolinus, who saved the Capitol from the Gauls, and was afterwards condemned to be cast from the Tarpeian rock for alleged treason, 8.652. |
1 |
mantēle, is, n. | a handcloth, a napkin, towel, 1.702. |
1 |
Mantō, ūs, f. | a nymph and prophetess, mother of Ocnus, founder of Mantua, 10.199. |
1 |
Marīca, ae, f. | a nymph of the river Liris, supposed to be the mother of the Latins, 7.47. |
1 |
marīnus, a, um | adj. (mare), of the sea; sea-. |
1 |
Marpēsius, a, um | adj. (Marpēsus), of Marpesus, a mountain in Paros; Marpesian, Parian, 6.471. |
1 |