Frieze's Aeneid Vocabulary List
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Headword | Definitions | Occurrences in the Aeneid Ordina in modo discendente |
---|---|---|
avītus, a, um | adj. (avus), of a grandfather; ancestral, ancient, 10.752. |
2 |
Aulestēs, is, m. | an Etruscan chief, 10.207. |
2 |
Aunus, ī, m. | an Italian chief, 11.700. |
2 |
auspex, icis, c. | one who divines by watching birds; a diviner; (fig.), a leader, author, patron, guide, director, 3.20. (avis and speciō, look) |
2 |
avunculus, ī, m. | an uncle on the mother’s side; uncle, 3.343. (avus) |
2 |
abluō, luī, lūtus, 3, a. | to wash away, 9.818; cleanse, purify, wash, 2.720. |
3 |
abnegō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to deny, refuse, with acc. and dat., 7.424, with inf., 2.637; alone, 2.654. |
3 |
abnuō, nuī, nuitus or nūtus, 3, a. and n. | to shake the head in dissent; refuse, with acc., 4.108; reject, 5.531; forbid, with acc. and inf., 10.8. |
3 |
aboleō, ēvī, itus, 2, a. | to cause to wane or waste; to destroy, 4.497; cleanse, efface, wipe out, 11.789; obliterate the memory of, 1.720. |
3 |
abscindō, scidī, scissus, 3, a. | to tear off, away, from, 5.685; separate, 3.418; tear, 4.590. |
3 |
Acca, ae, f. | a companion of Camilla, 11.820. |
3 |
acernus, a, um | of maple; maple-, 2.112. (acer, maple) |
3 |
Actius, a, um | adj. (poet. for Actiacus, from Actium), pertaining to Actium, a promontory and town of Epirus, celebrated as the scene of the decisive victory of Augustus over Antony and Cleopatra, in B.C. 31; Actian, 3.280. |
3 |
Actor, oris, m. | 1. The name of a Trojan, 9.500. 2. The name of an Auruncian, 12.94. |
3 |
adhibeō, uī, itus, 2, a. | to hold or apply to, unite with, admit to, 8.56; to bring to, invite, 5.62; adhibēre animum or animōs, to give attention, 11.315. (ad and habeō) |
3 |
adiuvō, iūvī, iūtus, 1, a. | to give aid to; to help, aid, support, 5, 345; encourage, stimulate, incite further, 12, 210. |
3 |
admoveō, mōvī, mōtus, 2, a. | to move, bring near to; to carry, convey to, 3.410; apply to, touch; admovēre ūbera, give suck, 4.367. |
3 |
adoleō, oluī, ultus, 2, n. | to cause to increase; to magnify, honor, adore, worship, 1.704; burn in sacrifice, offer, 3.547; fire, kindle, 7.71. |
3 |
aemulus, a, um | (adj.), striving to equal; competing, rivaling, 5.187; envious, 5.415; a rival for, aspiring, 10.371. |
3 |
Aenēius, a, um | adj. (id.), of Aeneas, 7.1. |
3 |
Aeolidēs, ae, m. | a son or descendant of Aeolus. 1. Ulysses, 6.529. 2. Misenus, 6.164. 3. Clytius, 9.774. |
3 |
Aeolius, a, um | (adj.), pertaining to Aeolus; Aeolian, 5.791. |
3 |
aequālis, e | adj. (aequō), equal; of the same age, 10.194; fellow, companion; subst., c., companion, 5.468. |
3 |
Aetōlus, a, um | (adj.), Aetolian, 11.428; Aetōla urbs, Arpi in Apulia, built by Diomedes, 11.239. |
3 |
aggerō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to pile up; (fig.), increase, aggravate, 4.197. (agger) |
3 |
agnus, ī, m. | a lamb, 1.635. |
3 |
Alētēs, is, m. | a companion of Aeneas, 1.121. |
3 |
Alpīnus, a, um | adj. (Alpēs), pertaining to the Alps; Alpine, 4.442. |
3 |
alumnus, ī, m. | a foster-son, 11.33, et al. (alō) |
3 |
ambāgēs, is, f. | a going about; a winding, 6.29; (fig.), details, particulars, story, 1.342; mysteries, 6.99. (in good usage in the abl. sing. and all cases of pl.) (ambigō, go about) |
3 |
ambiō, īvī or iī, ītus, 4, a. and n. | to go round; encompass, 6.550; (fig.), approach, address, 4.283; entrap, circumvent, 7.333. (amb- and eō) |
3 |
amor, ōris, m. | love, affection, in all senses; the passion of love; love, affection, or esteem, in all human relations, as parental, filial, of friends, allies, etc., 4.624, et al.; of gods, 7.769; love, liking, fancy, fondness, preference, for things, 11.583, et al.; freq., the hippomanes, or bunch of flesh supposed to appear on the forehead of a new-foaled colt, and instantly devoured by the dam, unless intercepted, and used as a love-charm, 4.516; personified, Amor, ōris, m., Cupid, Love, the god of love, 1.663; pl., amōrēs, um, m., affections, love, 4.28; mutual love, 5.334. (amō) |
3 |
anhēlitus, ūs, m. | hard-breathing; puffing, panting, 5.199. (anhēlō) |
3 |
anhēlō, āvī, ātus, 1, n. and a. | to pant, 5.254; of a furnace, to puff, roar, 8.421. (am- and hālō) |
3 |
anhēlus, a, um | adj. (anhēlō), panting, gasping, throbbing, 6.48. |
3 |
anīlis, e | adj. (anus), of an old woman; an old woman’s, 4.641. |
3 |
animal, ālis, n. | a living being, animal, 3.147; a brute animal, beast, animal. (anima) |
3 |
adnō, nāvī, nātus, 1, n. and a. | to swim to, sail toward or to, with dat., 1.538. |
3 |
annōsus, a, um | adj. (annus), full of years; aged, old, 4.441; hoary, 6.282. |
3 |
annuus, a, um | adj. (annus), annual, yearly, 5.46. |
3 |
Antheus (dissyl.), eos or eī, m. | Antheus, a companion of Aeneas, 1.181. |
3 |
aper, prī, m. | a wild boar, 1.324, et al. |
3 |
apparō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to get ready, prepare; resolve, be ready; with infin., 11.117. (ad and parō) |
3 |
applicō, āvī or uī, ātus or itus, 1, a. | to fold upon; join to; impel, drive to, 1.616; fasten, nail to, 12.303. (ad and plicō) |
3 |
aptus, a, um | adj. (obs. apō, lay hold), fixed, joined to; joined together; fitted with, studded, 4.482; fit, adapted, meet. |
3 |
aquōsus, a, um | adj. (aqua), abounding in water, bringing rain; watery, rainy, 4.52. |
3 |
arcānus, a, um | adj. (arca), hidden, secret, 4.422; subst., arcānum, ī, n., a secret, 1.262. |
3 |
arcessō, īvī, ītus, 3, a. | to cause to come; send for, summon, 5.746; hasten, provoke, 10.11; draw, derive; call up, bring, 6.119. (ar- for ad-, and cēdō) |
3 |
āreō, uī, 2, n. | to be dry; wither, 3.142; p., ārēns, entis, dry; dried up, shallow, 3.350; dry, thirsty. |
3 |
ariēs, ietis (oblique cases often trisyll. aryetis, etc.), m. | a ram, freq.; a military engine, a battering ram, 2.492. |
3 |
Arpī, ōrum | Argyripa, afterwards Arpi, a town built by Diomedes in Apulia, 11.246. |
3 |
adscīscō, scīvī, scītus, 3, a. | to call to one’s aid; to ally, 11.308; to adopt, 11.472. (adsciō) |
3 |
atavus, ī, m. | a great-great-great-grandfather, or forefather of the fifth previous generation; forefather, 7.474. |
3 |
atque, or ac | (conj.), and in addition, or and besides; and, as well, and indeed, and, 1.575; freq.; even, 2.626; in comparisons, as, 4.90; than, 3.561; repeated, atque — atque, both — and. |
3 |
Aventīnus, ī, m. | the Aventine mount in Rome, 7.659; a Latin chief, 7.657. |
3 |
Avernus, ī, m. | 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, Avernus, 6.126; portus Avernī, the harbor of Cumae, near Avernus, 5.813. (ἄορνος, birdless) |
3 |
aula, ae, archaic genit. āī, f. | a forecourt, atrium; court, peristyle (as surrounded with columns), hall, 3.354; palace, royal seat, 1.140. |
3 |
Auruncus, a, um | adj. (Aurunca), Auruncan, of Aurunca, an ancient town of Campania, 12.94. |
3 |
Auruncus, a, um | adj. (Aurunca), Auruncan, of Aurunca, an ancient town of Campania, 12.94. |
3 |
Ausonidēs, ae, pl. Ausonidae, ārum and ūm, m. | the Ausonians or primitive people of lower Italy; Italians, 10.564. (Auson, the eponymous father of the Ausonēs) |
3 |
Abās, antis, m. | 1. The twelfth king of Argos, grandson of Danaus, 3.286. 2. A Trojan, follower of Aeneas, 1.121. 3. An Etruscan, 10.427. |
4 |
abdūcō, dūxī, ductus, 3, a. | to lead away; remove, take away, 3.601; take away by force, 7.362; draw back, 5.428. |
4 |
adiciō, iēcī, iectus, 3, a. | to throw to or upon; add, join, 12.837. (ad and iaciō) |
4 |
adōrō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. | to pray to; supplicate, worship, adore, 1.48. |
4 |
adventō, āvī, ātus, 1, intens. n. | to come rapidly nearer; to approach, draw near, 5.328; 6.258. (adveniō) |
4 |
advolō, āvī, ātus, 1, n. | to fly to, fly, 10.511; hasten, run up, speed, 10.896. |
4 |
Aeacidēs, ae, m. | a son or descendant of Aeacus. 1. Achilles, as the grandson of Aeacus, 1.99. 2. Pyrrhus, the son of Achilles, 3.296. 3. Perseus, their descendant, king of Macedon, 6.839. |
4 |
aēnus, a, um | adj. (aes), of bronze; brazen, 2.470; subst., aēnum, ī, n., a bronze or brazen vessel; caldron, 1.213, et al. |
4 |
aestuō, āvī, ātus, 1, n. | to glow, to be dried up or parched; boil up; heave, foam, 6.297; fume, 8.258; rage, seethe, 12.666. (aestus) |
4 |
aeternus, a, um | adj. (for aeviternus), lasting, through ages; eternal; immortal, 1.36; perpetual, 4.99; (adv.), aeternum, for in aeternum, continually, eternally, 6.401; for ever, 11.98. |
4 |
Aetna, ae, f. | a volcanic mountain on the eastern coast of Sicily, 3.579. |
4 |
adfīgō, fīxī, fīxus, 3, a. | to fasten to, put to, 9.536; perf. p. pass., clinging to, 5.852. |
4 |
adflō, āvī, ātus, 1, n. and a. | to blow upon; breathe upon, 5.739; blast, 2.649; inspire, 6.50; impart, 1.591. |
4 |
agrestis, e | adj. (ager), pertaining to the fields or country; country-, rustic, rural, 3.34; wild, 7.111; subst., agrestis, is, m., a rustic, 7.504; husbandman. |
4 |
aliēnus, a, um | adj. (alius), pertaining to another, another’s; strange; foreign, 4.311; intended for another, 10.781; not one’s own. |
4 |
alveus, ī, m. | a cavity, hollow; the hollow trunk of a tree; (meton.), a boat, 6.412. (alvus) |
4 |
ancora, ae, f. | an anchor, 1.169. |
4 |
Androgeōs, eō, and Androgeus, eī, m. | 1. Androgeus, a son of the Cretan king Minos, murdered by the Athenians, 6.20. 2. A Greek chief at Troy, 2.371. |
4 |
antequam (or separated, ante quam) | (adv.), before that; sooner than. |
4 |
apis (-ēs), is, f. | a bee, 1.430, et al. |
4 |
appellō, pulī, pulsus, 3, a. | to drive to; bring, convey to, 1.377; draw up to, moor on the shore, 7.39. (ad and pellō) |
4 |
arātrum, ī, n. | a plow, 5.755, et al. (arō) |
4 |
Arcadius, a, um | adj. (Arcadia), of Arcadia. |
4 |
arduum, uī, n. | a high place; height, 5.695; 7.562. |
4 |
artifex, icis, m. | an artist, 1.455; artificis scelus, the iniquity of the deceiver = the accursed falsifier, 11.407; subtle schemer, artful deviser, 2.125. (ars and faciō) |
4 |
āveho, vexī, vectus, 3, a. | to carry away, 2.179; (pass.), āvectus esse, to have sailed away, departed, 2.43. |
4 |
Avernus, a, um | of Avernus (a lake near Naples, between Baiae and Cumae, in Campania, now Lago d’ Averno. Near it was one of the entrances to Hades), Avernian, 4.512; 6.118. |
4 |
augeō, auxī, auctus, 2, a. | to cause to grow or increase; increase, 5.565; load, pile, 7.111; augment, 7.211; multiply, 9.407. |
4 |
augur, uris, m., and rarely f. | a soothsayer, foretelling from any kind of sign; augur, diviner, prophet, 4.376. |
4 |
āvius, a, um | pathless, 2.736; devious, unapproachable, 12.480; that cannot be tracked, inaccessible, eluding pursuit, 11.810; subst., āvium, iī, n., a devious, inaccessible place, or way, 9.58. |
4 |
ausum, ī, n. | a daring deed; outrage, 2.535. |
4 |
accelerō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. and n. | to hasten; make haste, 5.675. (ad and celerō) |
5 |
adimō, ēmī, ēmptus, 3, a. | to take to one’s self; take from or away, 4, 244; pluck out, 3, 658. (ad and emō) |
5 |
advehō, vexī, vectus, 3, a. | to carry or convey to; (pass.), advehī, sail to, 1.558; 3.108; foll. by acc., 8.136. |
5 |
advena, ae, c. | a new comer; a stranger, foreigner, 4.591; adj., foreign, 7.38. (adveniō) |
5 |
Aetnaeus, a, um | adj. (Aetna), of Aetna; Aetnaean, 3.678. |
5 |
Agamemnonius, a, um | (adj.), pertaining to Agamemnon; Agamemnonian, Argive, Greek, 4.471. |
5 |
age, agite | (imperat. of ago), onward! away! come on! |
5 |
agricola, ae, m. | one who cultivates the land; a husbandman, 2.628. (ager and colō) |
5 |
alacer (alacris, m., 5.380), cris, cre | (adj.), lively; active, eager; bold, darting, exulting, 10.729; joyful, 5.380. |
5 |