고전 발음: []교회 발음: []
형태정보
기본형: capillus, capillī
et videbit eum. Cumque tumor albus in cute fuerit et capillorum mutaverit aspectum in album, caro quoque viva creverit in tumore, (Biblia Sacra Vulgata, Liber Leviticus, 13 13:10)
사제가 그를 살펴보는데, 살갗에 흰 부스럼이 나고 그곳의 털이 희어졌으며, 또 그 부스럼에 새살이 생겼으면, (불가타 성경, 레위기, 13장 13:10)
ut autem aiebat ille ad imbecillitatem firmandam fluentium capillorum. (Ammianus Marcellinus, Rerum Gestarum libri qui supersunt, Liber XXX, chapter 5 11:3)
(암미아누스 마르켈리누스, 사건 연대기, , 5장 11:3)
Adhuc enim scholas rhetorum et, ut dixi, geometrarum musicorumque vel, quod magis mirandum est, contemptissimorum vitiorum officinas, gulosius condiendi cibos et luxuriosius fercula struendi, capitumque et capillorum concinnatores non solum esse audivi, sed et ipse vidi: (Columella, Lucius Junius Moderatus, Res Rustica, book 1, chapter pr 5:1)
(콜루멜라, 루키우스 유니우스 모데라투스, 농업론, 1권, 머리말 5:1)
fuisse enim et modicae staturae et male pedatus scambusque traditur, munditiarum uero paene muliebrium, uulso corpore, galericulo capiti propter raritatem capillorum adaptato et adnexo, ut nemo dinosceret; (C. Suetonius Tranquillus, De Vita Caesarum, Otho, chapter 12 1:2)
(가이우스 수에토니우스 트란퀼루스, 황제전, , 12장 1:2)
quamuis libello, quem de cura capillorum ad amicum edidit, haec etiam, simul illum seque consolans, inseruerit: (C. Suetonius Tranquillus, De Vita Caesarum, Domitianus, chapter 18 2:4)
(가이우스 수에토니우스 트란퀼루스, 황제전, , 18장 2:4)
1. Crinis and capillus denote the natural hair merely in a physical sense, like θρίξ; crinis (from κάρηνον), any growth of hair, in opposition to the parts on which hair does not grow; capillus (from caput), only the hair of the head, in opp. to the beard, etc. Liv. vi. 16. Suet. Aug. 23. Cels. vi. 2. Cic. Tusc. v. 20. Rull. ii. 5; whereas in coma and cæsaries the accessory notion of beauty, as an object of sense, is involved, inasmuch as hair is a natural ornament of the body, or itself the object of ornament; coma (κόμη) is especially applicable to the hair of females; cæsaries, to that of males, like ἔθειρα. Hence crinitus means nothing more than covered with hair; capillatus is used in opp. to bald-headed, Petron. 26, and the Galli are styled comati, as wearing long hair, like καρηκομόωντες. 2. Crinis, capillus, coma, cæsaries, denote the hair in a collective sense, the whole growth of hair; whereas pilus means a single hair, and especially the short and bristly hair of animals. Hence pilosus is in opp. to the beautiful smoothness of the skin, as Cic. Pis. I; whereas crinitus and capillatus are in opp. to ugly nakedness and baldness. (iii. 14.) 3. Cirrus and cincinnus denote curled hair; cirrus (κόῤῥη) is a natural, cincinnus (κίκιννος) an artificial curl. (iii. 23.)
출처: Döderlein's Hand-book of Latin Synonymes by Ludwig von Doederlein
전체 데이터 내 출현빈도: 약 0.0096%
고전 발음: []교회 발음: []
장음표시 사용