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기본형: coma, comae
arguta meretrice potes Davoque Chremeta eludente senem comis garrire libellosunus vivorum, Fundani, Pollio regumfacta canit pede ter percusso; (SERMONVM Q. HORATI FLACCI, PRIMVS, 10 10:22)
(호라티우스의 풍자, 1권, 10장 10:22)
stabat adhuc, cui caeruleae per cornua vittae et taxi frons hirta comis; (C. Valerius Catullus, Argonautica, C. Valeri Flacci Argonauticon Liber Primus. 818:1)
(가이우스 발레리우스 카툴루스, 아르고나우티카, 818:1)
ducit et ad fluvios ac vincula solvere monstrat prima pedum glaucasque comis praetexere frondes (C. Valerius Catullus, Argonautica, C. Valeri Flacci Argonauticon Liber Tertius. 462:1)
(가이우스 발레리우스 카툴루스, 아르고나우티카, 462:1)
tum novus implevit vultus honor, ac sua flavis reddita cura comis, graditurque oblita malorum. (C. Valerius Catullus, Argonautica, C Valeri Flacci Argonautiocon Liber Octavus. 251:1)
(가이우스 발레리우스 카툴루스, 아르고나우티카, 251:1)
vitreo bibit ille priapo, reticulumque comis aura tum ingentibus implet caerulea indutus scutulata aut galbina rasa, et per Iunonem domini iurante ministro; (Juvenal, Satires, book 1, Satura II 2:60)
(유베날리스, 풍자, 1권, 2:60)
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 0.0093%
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