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기본형: ēsuriēs, ēsuriēī
"Ex quo sollicite providendum est, ut, quos saturitas de paradiso expulit, reducat esuries." (Jerome, Saint, Epistulae. Selections., An Eustochium 10:7)
(히에로니무스, 편지들, 10:7)
sed et tu vigilantiae suae me, id est famae meae statum causamque commenda, vereor autem ne famem populi Romani theatralis caveae fragor insonet et infortunio meo publica deputetur esuries. (Sidonius Apollinaris, Epistulae, book 1, Sidonius Campaniano suo salutem 2:1)
(시도니우스 아폴리나리스, 편지들, 1권, 2:1)
Pena, Labor, Sitis, Esuries, Ieiunia, Cure. (ALANUS DE INSULIS, ANTICLAUDIANUS, LIBER OCTAVUS 16:4)
(, , 16:4)
Labor irruit, instat Esuries, Sitis insultat, Ieiunia pugnant, Insurgunt uigiles Cure, dant arma Labori Gleba, lapis, fustes, telum de stipite querno. (ALANUS DE INSULIS, ANTICLAUDIANUS, LIBER NONUS ET ULTIMUS 4:9)
(, , 4:9)
Esuries armata capit carecta, ministrat Tela Sitis, relique paribus bacchantur in armis. (ALANUS DE INSULIS, ANTICLAUDIANUS, LIBER NONUS ET ULTIMUS 4:10)
(, , 4:10)
Fames is hunger from want of food, like λιμός, in opp. to satietas; whereas esuries is hunger from an empty and craving stomach, in opp. to sitis; lastly, inedia is not eating, in a general sense, without reference to the cause, though for the most part from a voluntary resolution, like ἀσιτία. Hence fame and esurie perire mean to die of hunger, whereas inedia perire means to starve one’s self to death. (iii. 119.)
출처: Döderlein's Hand-book of Latin Synonymes by Ludwig von Doederlein
전체 데이터 내 출현빈도: 약 0.0001%
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