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Headword | Definitions | Occurrences in the Aeneid |
---|---|---|
peplum, ī, n. | a mantle, robe, or shawl worn over the other garments; the mantle used for draping the statues of Athena, 1.480. |
1 |
per | (prep. w. acc.), through, (of place, time, agency, instrumentality, medium, and manner), 4.357, et al.; along, 1.576; over, 1.498; on, 5.335; by, at, 4.56; through, throughout, during, 1.31; in, 9.31; in entreaties, adjurations, and oaths, by, 2.141, et al. |
351 |
peragō, ēgī, āctus, 3, a. | to drive through; carry through; execute, achieve, accomplish, finish, perform, 4.653; pursue, 6.384; fulfill, achieve, 3.493; go through with, distribute, 5.362; go through mentally, 6.105. |
8 |
peragrō, āvī, ātus, 1, n. and a. | to go through fields or lands; to roam, travel; traverse, 1.384. (per and ager) |
3 |
percellō, culī, culsus, 3, a. | to strike, smite vehemently; strike down, 5.374; overthrow, 11.310. |
2 |
percipiō, cēpī, ceptus, 3, a. | to take in completely; perceive; feel, 7.356; understand, 9.190. (per and capiō) |
2 |
percurrō, cucurrī or currī, cursus, 3, n. and a. | to run through or over, 8.392; (fig.), run over in narration, relate briefly, 6.627. |
3 |
percutiō, cussī, cussus, 3, a. | to smite through; strike, smite, 4.589; p., percussus, a, um, struck, smitten, 7.503; of the effect of sound, reverberating, echoing, penetrated, filled, 1.513; 8.121. (per and quatiō) |
10 |
perdō, didī, ditus, 3, a. | to put through completely; ruin, undo, kill, destroy, 7.304; to abandon; lose, 11.58. |
1 |
perdō, didī, ditus, 3, a. | to put through completely; ruin, undo, kill, destroy, 7.304; to abandon; lose, 11.58. |
3 |
peredō, ēdī, ēsus, 3, a. | to eat through or completely; eat up; consume, 6.442. |
1 |
peregrīnus, a, um | adj. (peregre from per and ager), of foreign lands; foreign, barbarian, 11.772. |
1 |
perennis, e | adj. (per and annus), throughout the year; lasting, continual, perpetual, endless, 9.79. |
1 |
pereō, iī, itus, īre, irreg. n. | to go out of sight; to be lost, undone, 4.497; perish, 2.660; die, 2.408. |
11 |
pererrō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to wander through or over, 2.295; survey, 4.363; explore, try, 5.441; pervade, 7.375. |
5 |
perficiō, fēcī, fectus, 3, a. | to make completely; finish, complete, 6.745; perform, 3.178; p., perfectus, a, um, worked, wrought, executed, 5.267; fulfilled, 3.548. (per and faciō) |
1 |
perferō, tulī, lātus, ferre, irreg. a. | to carry or bear through; carry, restore, return, 11.717; report, 5.665; convey completely, carry home, 10.786; reach the mark, 12.907; undergo, endure, suffer, 3.323; (w. reflex. pron.), betake one's self, go, 1.389; p., perlātus, a, um, carried to the mark; striking, 11.803. |
20 |
perficiō, fēcī, fectus, 3, a. | to make completely; finish, complete, 6.745; perform, 3.178; p., perfectus, a, um, worked, wrought, executed, 5.267; fulfilled, 3.548. (per and faciō) |
12 |
perfidus, a, um | adj. (per and fidēs), violating one's faith; faithless, perfidious, treacherous, 4.305; of things, disappointing; deceptive, treacherous, 12.731. |
6 |
perflō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to blew through or over; sweep over, 1.83. |
1 |
perfodiō, fōdī, fossus, 3, a. | to dig or pierce through, transfix, 11.10. |
1 |
perforō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to bore or pierce through, 10.485. |
2 |
perfringō, frēgī, frāctus, 3, a. | to break through; break completely; dash or break in pieces, crush, 10.279; break, dash, 11.614. (per and frangō) |
2 |
perfundō, fūdī, fūsus, 3, a. | to pour over or along; wash, 3.397; overspread, overflow, 11.626; spot, stain, 2.221; anoint, 5.135; besprinkle, 12.611. |
12 |
perfurō, uī, 3, n. | to rage wildly; rave, 9.343. |
1 |
Pergama, ōrum, n., Pergamum, ī, n., and Pergamus (-os), ī, f. | 1. The citadel or walls of Troy, 3.87; Troy, 4.344, et al. 2. The Trojan citadel of Helenus in Epirus, 3.336. |
18 |
Pergameus, a, um | adj. (Pergamus), of Pergamus, Pergamean; Trojan, 3.110. Pergamea (sc. urbs), the city built by Aeneas in Crete, 3.133. |
5 |
pergō, perrēxī, perrēctus, 3, n. and a. | to direct one's course right onward; go on, 1.389; march, 11.521; continue, 6.198; (fig.), of narration, 1.372. (per and regō) |
8 |
perhibeō, uī, itus, 2, a. | to hold persistently; maintain, assert; say, report, 4.179. (per and habeō) |
3 |
perīculum (perīclum), ī, n. | a trial; risk, hazard, danger, peril, 1.615, et al. |
25 |
Peridīa, ae, f. | the mother of Onites, 12.515. |
1 |
perimō, ēmī, ēmptus, 3, a. | to take away completely; annihilate, destroy, 5.787; slay, kill, 6.163. (per and emō) |
7 |
Periphās, antis, m. | Periphas, a Greek warrior, companion of Pyrrhus, 2.476. |
1 |
periūrium, iī, n. | a false oath; perjury, perfidy, treachery, 4.542. (periūrus) |
2 |
periūrus, a, um | adj. (per and iūs), violating one's oath; perjured, forsworn, 2.195. |
1 |
perlābor, lāpsus sum, 3, dep. n. | to glide through or over, 1.147; reach, come down in tradition, 7.646. |
2 |
perlegō, lēgī, lēctus, 3, a. | to scan narrowly; survey, examine, 6.34. |
1 |
permētior, mēnsus sum, 4, dep. a. | to measure completely; traverse, 3.157. |
1 |
permisceō, miscuī, mistus or mixtus, 2, a. | to mix completely; mix, mingle, 1.488; (fig.), disturb, confound, 7.348. |
4 |
permittō, mīsī, missus, 3, a. | to let go without hindrance; allow, permit, 1.540; give up, commit, consign, 4.640; surrender, 4.104. |
6 |
permisceō, miscuī, mistus or mixtus, 2, a. | to mix completely; mix, mingle, 1.488; (fig.), disturb, confound, 7.348. |
1 |
permulceō, mulsī, mulsus or mulctus, 2, a. | to stroke; calm, soothe, cheer, 5.816. |
1 |
permūtō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to exchange, 9.307. |
1 |
pernīx, īcis | (adj.), nimble, fleet, swift, agile, 4.180, et al. |
2 |
pērō, ōnis, m. | a boot or high shoe made of rawhide, 7.690. |
1 |
perōdī, ōdisse, ōsus sum, def. a. | to hate, abhor, loathe, 6.435. (per and ōdī) |
2 |
perpetior, pessus sum, 3, dep. a. and n. | to bear completely; suffer, endure, 9.60; permit, 12.644. (per and patior) |
2 |
perpetuus, a, um | adj. (per and petō), continuing through; perpetual, continual, 4.32; stretching out, long extending or reaching, 8.183. |
3 |
perplexus, a, um | (adj.), much entangled; puzzling, intricate, 9.391. |
1 |
perrumpō, rūpī, ruptus, 3, a. | to break, burst through, 2.480. |
2 |
persentiō, sēnsī, sēnsus, 4, a. | to feel deeply; feel, 4.448; perceive, 4.90. |
2 |
persequor, secūtus sum, 3, dep. a. | to follow continually; follow, 9.218; pursue, follow closely, 10.562. |
2 |
persolvō, solvī, solūtus, 3, a. | to loosen completely; set free; free one's self from obligation; pay, render, give, return, 1.600, et al.; sacrifice, offer, 5.484. |
5 |
personō, sonuī, sonitus, 1, n. and a. | to sound loudly; sing, play, 1.741; cause to or make resound, 6.171. |
3 |
perstō, stitī, stātus, 1, n. | to continue standing; remain fixed, 5.812; persist, 2.650. |
2 |
perstringō, strīnxī, strīctus, 3, a. | to bind tightly; graze, 10.344. |
1 |
pertaedet, taesum est, 2, impers. | (with mē, tē, etc.), it much wearies me, you, etc.; one is weary, disgusted; w. gen. of the thing, 4.18; 5.714. |
2 |
pertēmptō, āvī, ātus, 1, intens. a. | to handle completely; test, prove; to search through; thrill, penetrate, pervade, fill, 1.502, et al. |
3 |
perterreō, uī, itus, 2, a. | to fill with terror; to affright, dismay, 10.426. |
1 |
perveniō, vēnī, ventus, 4, n. | to come to the end; arrive, reach, 2.81. |
4 |
perversus, a, um | turned the wrong way; contrary, adverse, 7.584. (pervertō) |
1 |
pervius, a, um | adj. (per and via), that can be passed through; unobstructed, free; common, 2.453. |
1 |
pervolitō, āvī, ātus, 1, intens. n. | to fly about; flit around, 8.24.(pervolō) |
1 |
pervolō, āvī, ātus, 1, n. | to fly through or over, 12.474. |
1 |
pēs, pedis, m. | the foot; claw, talon, paw, hoof, freq.; of the current of a river, 9.125; the footrope at the lower corner of a sail, the sheet; hence, facere pedem, to manage the sheet, shift the sail; tack, 5.830; pedem reprimere, to retreat, draw back, 2.378; ferre pedem, go, 2.756; efferre pedem, go out, depart, 2.657; pedem advertere, approach, draw near, 6.386; aequō pede, in equal combat, 12.465. (ποῦς, ποδός) |
65 |
pestifer, era, erum | adj. (pestis and ferō), pest-bringing; pestilential, 7.570. |
1 |
pestis, is, f. | destruction, 5.699; plague, pest, scourge, 3.215; death, 9.328; infection, pollution, 6.737; fatal, baneful passion, 1.712. (perdō) |
14 |
Petēlia, ae, f. | Petelia, a town on the eastern coast of Bruttium, 3.402. |
1 |
petō, īvī or iī, ītus, 3, a. | to fall upon, attack, assail, 3.603; seek, 1.181; strike, 11.9; advance towards, 2.213; follow up, pursue, 5.226; make for, 1.158; repair to, 1.519; hasten, approach to, 1.717; greet, 1.611; aim at, 5.508; (fig.), assail, try, 4.675; purpose, intend, 2.151; apply to, solicit, entreat, beg, beseech, crave, ask, seek, 4.433, et al.; w. inf., 7.96; petere terram, fall prostrate upon the ground, 3.93. |
128 |
Phaeāces, um, m., pl. | the Phaeacians, the Homeric name of the inhabitants of Corcyra, the modern Corfu, 3.291. |
1 |
Phaedra, ae, f. | one of the daughters of Minos, king of Crete, and wife of Theseus, king of Athens, 6.445. |
1 |
Phaëthōn, ontis, m. | Phaëthon, the son of Helios and Clymene; for the sun-god, the sun, 5.105. |
2 |
phalanx, ngis, f. | a body of troops in compact array; a battalion, army, host, 6.489; of a fleet, 2.254. |
7 |
phalerae, ārum, f. | bosses of metal worn on the corselet; trappings, 9.458; trappings or caparisons for the heads, necks, and breasts of horses, 5.310. |
3 |
Phaleris, is, m. (acc. -im) | a Trojan, 9.762. |
1 |
pharetra, ae, f. | a quiver, 1.323, et al. |
13 |
pharetrātus, a, um | adj. (pharetra), bearing the quiver, 11.649. |
1 |
Pharus, ī, and Pharō, ōnis, m. | a Rutulian, 10.322. |
1 |
Phēgeus (dissyll.), ī or eos, m. | 1. A follower of Aeneas, 5.263. 2. Another follower of Aeneas, 12.371. |
3 |
Pheneos (-us), eī, f. | a town of Arcadia, 8.165. |
1 |
Pherēs, ētis, m. | an Arcadian, follower of Pallas, 10.413. |
1 |
Philoctētēs, ae, m. | son of the Thessalian king Poeas of Meliboea, companion of Hercules, from whom he inherited the bow and arrows with which he killed Paris, 3.402. |
1 |
Phīnēius, a, um | adj. (Phīneus), pertaining to Phineus, king of Salmydessus, who was smitten by the gods with blindness and tormented by the Harpies, for putting out the eyes of his sons, 3.212. |
1 |
Phlegethōn, ontis, m. | a river of Tartarus, 6.551. |
2 |
Phlegyās, ae, m. | a son of Mars and king of the Lapithae, 6.618. |
1 |
Phoebē, ēs, f. | the sister of Apollo; Diana, Luna. |
1 |
Phoebēus, a, um | adj. (Phoebus), pertaining to Phoebus or the sun; Phoebean, 3.637. |
2 |
Phoebigena, ae, m. | the son of Phoebus, Aesculapius, 7.773. (Phoebus and genō) |
1 |
Phoebus, ī, m. | Phoebus or Apollo, 1.329, et al. |
32 |
Phoenīces, um, m. | the Phoenicians, 1.344. |
1 |
Phoenissus, a, um | (adj.), Phoenician, 1.670; subst., Phoenissa, ae, f., a Phoenician woman; Dido, 1.714, et al. |
5 |
Phoenīx, īcis, m. | Phoenix, son of Amyntor, and companion of Achilles, 2.762. |
1 |
Pholoē, ēs, f. | a Cretan woman, slave of Aeneas, 5.285. |
1 |
Pholus, ī, m. | a centaur, son of Ixion; a Trojan warrior, 12.341. |
2 |
Phorbās, antis, m. | Phorbas, a son of Priam, killed at the siege of Troy, 5.842. |
1 |
Phorcus, ī, m. | a sea-god, son of Neptune or Pontus and Gaia, 5.240; a Latin patriarch, 10.328. |
3 |
Phryges, um, m. | Phrygians; the inhabitants of Phrygia, which originally included the Troad; hence, also, Trojans, 1.468, et al.; sing., Phryx, ygis, m., a Phrygian or Trojan, 12.99. |
11 |
Phrygia, ae, f. | Phrygia, the Troad, 7.207. (Phryx) |
3 |
Phrygius, a, um | Phrygian, Trojan, 1.381; subst., Phrygiae, ārum, f., Phrygian or Trojan women, 518. (Phryx) |
28 |
Phryx, ygis | Phrygian; of the inhabitants of Phrygia, which originally included the Troad; hence, also, Trojans, 1.468, et al.; sing., Phryx, ygis, m., a Phrygian or Trojan, 12.99. |
2 |