Create a custom vocabulary list | Credits | Download: .xml .csv
Headword | Definitions | Occurrences in the Aeneid |
---|---|---|
pār, paris | (adj.), equal, 1.705; like, 2.794; equal, well-poised, steady, 4.252; side by side, 5.580; well-matched, 5.114. |
26 |
parō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. and n. | to make ready, prepare, build, 3.160; (w. inf.), begin, get ready, 1.179; undertake, 6.369; n., 2.121. |
13 |
Parca, ae, f. | more freq. pl., Parcae, ārum, f., the Fates (Clotho, the spinner, Lachesis, the allotter, and Atropos, the unaverted), 1.22, et al. |
8 |
parcō, pepercī, parcitus, 3, n. | to spare, w. dat.; refrain from using, save, 8.317; spare, forbear to hurt or persecute, 1.526; cease, abstain, refrain from, 1.257; regard, yield to, 10.880; w. inf., beware, forbear. (rel. to parcus, scanty) |
15 |
parēns, entis, c. | a parent; father, sire, 1.75, et al.; mother, 2.591; ancestor, 2.448, et al. (pariō) |
67 |
pāreō, uī, itus, 2, n. | to appear; to present one's self; to obey, 1.689; to be subject, under command; to follow, 10.179; answer, reveal signs or omens, 10.176. |
17 |
pariēs, etis, m. | a wall, whether partition or external wall, 5.589; 2.442. |
2 |
pariō, peperī, partus, 3, a. | to bring forth, bear, 6.89; procure, 6.435; win, 2.578; secure, 3.495; p., partus, a, um, born; produced, prepared, 2.784; won, 5.229. |
8 |
Paris, idis, m. | Paris, son of Priam and Hecuba, who occasioned the Trojan war by carrying off Helen from Sparta; slain by the arrow of Philoctetes, 4.215, et al. |
9 |
pariter | (adv.), equally, 2.729; also, in like manner, in the same manner, on equal terms, 1.572; side by side, 2.205; at the same time, 10.865; pariter — pariter, 8.545. (pār) |
30 |
Parius, a, um | adj. (Paros), of Paros; Parian, 1.593. |
1 |
parma, ae, f. | a small round shield or buckler, usually carried by light troops, 11.693, et al.; in gen., a shield, 2.175. |
8 |
parō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. and n. | to make ready, prepare, build, 3.160; (w. inf.), begin, get ready, 1.179; undertake, 6.369; n., 2.121. |
45 |
Parrhasius, a, um | adj. (Parrhasia), of Parrhasia in Arcadia; Parrhasian or Arcadian, 11.31. |
2 |
pars, partis, f. | a part, freq.; share, portion, 3.223; side, part, 4.153; way, 8.21; quarter, direction, 12.521; partnership, share, 12.145; w. ellipsis of first pars, 5.108. |
88 |
Parthenius, iī, m. | a Trojan, 10.748. |
1 |
Parthenopaeus, ī, m. | Parthenopaeus, son of Meleager and Atalanta, and one of the seven chiefs who fought against Thebes, 6.480. |
1 |
Parthī, ōrum, m. | the Parthi, a nation occupying the country of the Medes and Persians. |
3 |
partim | (adv.), in part; partly, 10.330, et al. (pars) |
4 |
partior, ītus sum, 4, dep. a. | to share, divide, distribute, 1.194; separate, 5.562. (pars) |
4 |
partus, ūs, m. | a bringing forth; birth, 1.274; offspring; son, 7.321. (pariō) |
1 |
partus, ūs, m. | a bringing forth; birth, 1.274; offspring; son, 7.321. (pariō) |
6 |
parum | (adv.), only a little, too little; little; not, 6.862. (comp.) minus, less; otherwise, 3.561; (superl.) minimē, least; very little; in the least degree; not at all, 6.97. (cf. parvus) |
18 |
parumper | (adv.), a little while; for a short time, 6.382. (parum and -per) |
1 |
Paros, ī, f. | Paros, an island in the Aegean, one of the Cyclades, celebrated for its statuary marble, 3.126. |
1 |
parvulus, a, um | adj. (parvus), very little; small, little, 4.328. |
1 |
parvum, ī, n., | a small estate, 6.843; small property, little, 9.607; pl., small affairs, 1.24. |
3 |
parvus, a, um (comp., minor, us; sup., minimus, a, um) | (adj.), small, little, 2.677, et al.; a child, infant, 10.317; subst., parvum, ī, n., a small estate, 6.843; small property, little, 9.607; pl., small affairs, 1.24; abl., parvō, at small expense, 10.494; comp., minor, us, less, smaller; younger, 9.593; inferior, 10.129; pl., minōrēs, um, m., descendants, posterity, 1.532. |
37 |
pāscō, pāvī, pāstus, 3, a. and n. | to furnish with food; to feed; rear, breed, 6.655; nourish, 1.608; (fig.), 1.464; let grow, 7.391; cherish, indulge, nourish, 10.627; pass. as dep., pāscor, pāstus sum, 3, a. and n., to graze, 1.186; feed upon, eat, 2.471; use for pasture, to pasture, 11.319. |
10 |
pāscō, pāvī, pāstus, 3, a. and n. | to furnish with food; to feed; rear, breed, 6.655; nourish, 1.608; (fig.), 1.464; let grow, 7.391; cherish, indulge, nourish, 10.627; pass. as dep., pāscor, pāstus sum, 3, a. and n., to graze, 1.186; feed upon, eat, 2.471; use for pasture, to pasture, 11.319. |
5 |
Pāsiphaē, ēs, f. | Pasiphaë, daughter of Helios, wife of Minos, and mother of Androgeos, Phaedra, Ariadne, and the Minotaur, 6.25. |
2 |
passim | (adv.), here and there, in all directions; everywhere, 2.364, et al. (passus) |
13 |
passus, ūs, m. | a spreading or stretching; a step, pace, 2.724. (pandō) |
4 |
pāstor, ōris, m. | one who feeds; herdsman, shepherd, 2.58. (pāscō) |
11 |
pāstōrālis, e | adj. (pāstor), pertaining to shepherds; country, rustic, 7.513. |
2 |
pāstus, ūs, m. | a pasturing, feeding; pasture, 11.494. (pāscō) |
2 |
Patavium, iī, n. | Patavium, now Padua, an ancient town in northern Italy, 1.247. |
1 |
patefaciō, fēcī, factus (pass, patefierī), 3, a. | to open, 2.259. (pateō and faciō) |
1 |
patēns, entis | open; broad, gaping, 11.40. |
4 |
pateō, uī, 2, n. | to be or stand open, 1.298; fly open, open, 6.81; to lie open, to open, extend, 12.710; stretch, 6.578; stand exposed or ready, 11.644; (fig.), be evident, patent, clear, manifest, 1.405. |
14 |
pater, tris, m. | a father, 1.60, et al.; sire, ancestor, forefather, 1.641; often for Jupiter, 1.60; applied to many of the gods, 5.241, et al; often to rivers and lakes; pl., parents, 2.579; elders, senators, fathers, chiefs, 4.682; pater Rōmānus, Augustus (or, perhaps, the Roman citizen), 9.449. (πατήρ) |
172 |
patera, ae, f. | a broad, saucer-shaped dish, used in making libations; a libation cup, patera, 1.729. (pateō) |
12 |
paternus, a, um | adj. (pater), pertaining to a father; a father's, of a father, 5.81; derived from a father; paternal, ancestral, 3.121. |
9 |
patēscō, patuī, 3, inc. n. | to begin to be open; to be open to view, stand open, 2.483; open, 3.530; become evident, manifest, 2.309. (pateō) |
3 |
patiēns, entis | submissive, patiently, 5.390; w. gen., yielding, submitting, 6.77. (patior) |
4 |
patior, passus sum, 3, dep. a. | to suffer, permit, allow, 1.644; submit to, bear, undergo, endure, 1.219. |
32 |
patria, ae, f. | (sc. terra), father or native land; one's country, 2.291, et al.; ancestral land, 1.380; a country, land, 1.540. |
42 |
patrius, a, um | adj. (pater), pertaining to one's father or ancestors; a father's, 2.658; paternal, natural to a father, 1.643; exacted by a father, 7.766; due to, felt for a father or parent, 9.294; ancestral, hereditary, 3.249; of one's country, native, 3.281; belonging to the nation, of the country, 11.374. |
54 |
Patrōn, ōnis, m. | Patron, a follower of Aeneas, 5.298. |
1 |
patruus, ī, m. | a father's brother, paternal uncle, uncle, 6.402. (pater) |
1 |
patulus, a, um | adj. (pateō), opening, wide; wide, broad. |
1 |
pauca, ōrum, n. | a few things; few words, 3.313, et al. |
5 |
paucī, ōrum, m. pl. | few, a few (persons), 1.538, et al. |
3 |
paucus, a, um | (adj.), small, little; pl., paucī, ae, a, few, a few. |
10 |
pavidus, a, um | adj. (paveō, fear), trembling, alarmed, terror-stricken, 2.489; solicitous, trembling with expectation, eager, 5.575. |
10 |
pavitō, āvī, ātus, 1, intens. n. | to be much agitated; tremble, quake with fear; be terrified, 2.107. (paveō) |
3 |
paulātim | (adv.), little by little; gradually, 1.720. (paulum) |
7 |
paulisper | (adv.), for a short time, a little while, 5.846. (paulum and –per) |
1 |
paulum | (adv.), a little, 3.597. (paulus, small) |
2 |
pavor, ōris, m. | a trembling, panic, fear, terror, 2.229; throbbing; eager, trembling, anxiety, 5.138. (paveō) |
5 |
pauper, eris | (adj.), of small means; dependent, poor, 2.87; little, lowly, humble, 6.811. |
6 |
pauperiēs, ēī, f. | narrow or straitened circumstances; poverty, 6.437. (pauper) |
1 |
pāx, pācis, f. | peace, 1.249; alliance, friendship, 7.266; indulgence, favor, pardon, 3.261; favor, assistance, 3.370. (cf. pacīscor) |
37 |
peccātum, ī, n. | a fault, error, delinquency, sin, crime, 10.32. (peccō) |
1 |
peccō, āvī, ātus, 1, n. | to commit a fault, sin, transgress, offend, 9.140. |
1 |
pecten, inis, m. | a comb; a weaver's sley; an instrument for striking the strings of the lyre; a plectrum, 6.647. (pectō) |
2 |
pectō, pexī, pexus, 3, a. | to comb, 12.86. |
2 |
pectus, oris, n. | the breast, 1.44; stomach, 5.182; (fig.), mind, 1.227; thought, 5.7; breast, heart, soul, feeling, freq.; spirit, courage, 6.261, et al.; personif.; person, soul, spirit, 2.349. |
120 |
pecus, udis, f. | one animal of a flock or herd; an animal, 1.743; a sheep, 3.120; victim for sacrifices, 4.63. |
16 |
pecus, oris, n. | a flock or herd, freq.; cattle; brood, 1.435. |
9 |
pedes, itis, m. | one who goes on foot; as a footman; on foot, 12.510; a foot-soldier; collectively, infantry, soldiery, 6.516. (pēs) |
9 |
pedestris, e | adj. (pedes), pedestrian; unmounted; on foot, 10.364. |
2 |
pelagus, ī, n. | the sea; open sea, main, 1.138; flood, 1.246. |
44 |
Pelasgī, ōrum, m. | the Pelasgians, supposed to have been the original inhabitants of Greece and of several other countries and islands of the Mediterranean; in general for Greeks, 1.624, et al. |
3 |
Pelasgus, a, um | adj. (Pelasgī), Pelasgian; Greek, 6.503. |
4 |
Peliās, ae, m. | a Trojan, 2.436. |
2 |
Pēlīdēs, ae, m. | 1. The son of Peleus, Achilles, 2.548. 2. Neoptolemus or Pyrrhus, grandson of Peleus, 2.263, et al. |
4 |
pellāx, ācis | adj. (pelliciō), leading into error; wily, deceitful, artful, 2.90. |
1 |
pellis, is, f. | a skin, hide, 2.722, et al. |
13 |
pellō, pepulī, pulsus, 3, a. | to drive; impel, throw, shoot, 12.320; slay, 11.56; drive away, expel, banish, 1.385; repel, 10.277; dismiss, 5.812; strike with sound, cause to echo, 7.702; to clash, reverberate, 8.529. |
29 |
Pelopēus, a, um | adj. (Pelops), of Pelops; Pelopeian, Argive, Greek, 2.193. |
1 |
Pelōrus, ī, m., and Pelōrum, ī, n. | the northeastern cape of Sicily, 3.411. |
2 |
pelta, ae, f. | a light crescent-shaped shield, 1.490. |
3 |
Penātēs, ium, m. | gods of the household; hearth-, fireside gods, 2.514, et al.; tutelary gods of the state as a national family, 1.68; (fig.), fireside, hearth, dwelling-house, abode, 1.527. (penus) |
24 |
pendeō, pependī, 2, n. | to hang, foll. by abl. alone or w. prep., 2.546, et al.; 5.511; be suspended, 1.106; cling, 9.562; bend, stoop forward, 5.147; (meton.), linger, delay, 6.151; listen, hang upon, 4.79. |
28 |
pendō, pependī, pēnsus, 3, a. | to hold suspended; to hang, balance, weigh; weigh out money; hence, (fig.), to pay or suffer punishment or penalty, 6.20. |
2 |
Pēneleus (trisyll.), eī or eos, m. | Peneleus, a Greek warrior, said to have been one of the suitors of Helen, 2.425. |
1 |
penes | (prep. w. acc.), within one's power or possession, 12.59. |
1 |
penetrābilis, e | adj. (penetrō), that can be pierced; in an active sense, piercing, 10.481. |
1 |
penetrālis, e | adj. (penetrō), innermost, inner, 2.297; subst., penetrālia, ium, n., the interior of a house; sanctuary, shrine, chapel (of a dwelling or temple), 2.484, et al. |
7 |
penetrālis, e | adj. (penetrō), innermost, inner, 2.297; subst., penetrālia, ium, n., the interior of a house; sanctuary, shrine, chapel (of a dwelling or temple), 2.484, et al. |
3 |
penetrō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. and n. | to penetrate, reach, 1.243; attain to, go as far as, penetrate to, 7.207. (rel. to penitus) |
4 |
penitus | adv. (cf. penes), inwardly, far within, deep, deeply, 1.200; wholly, entirely, 6.737; afar, 11.623; far away, 1.512. |
22 |
penna (pinna), ae, f. | a feather, 12.750; wing, pinion, 3.258; in the form pinna, a pinnacle, battlement, palisade, 7.159. |
12 |
pennātus, a, um | adj. (penna), winged, 9.473. |
1 |
pēnsum, ī, n. | that which is weighed out or assigned for a day's spinning; a day's work; task, 8.412; a web, 9.476. (pendō) |
2 |
Penthesilēa, ae, f. | Penthesilea; the queen of the Amazons slain by Achilles at Troy, 1.491. |
2 |
Pentheus (dissyll.), eī or eos, m. | Pentheus, king of Thebes, grandson of Cadmus, and son of Echion and Agave; torn to pieces by his mother and her Bacchanalian companions for mocking at the orgies of Bacchus, 4.469. |
1 |
pēnūria, ae, f. | want, destitution, need, 7.113. |
1 |
penus, ūs and ī, m. and f. | also penus, oris, n. (rel. to penes, Penātēs, penetrō), that which is stored within; the household store of provisions; stores, provisions, viands, 1.704. |
1 |