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기본형: īlia, īliōrum
deinde super rectum intestinum progressa, iliis feminae latera sua innectit. (Aulus Cornelius Celsus, De Medicina, Liber IV, chapter 1 1:65)
(켈수스, 의학에 관하여, , 1장 1:65)
deinde super rectum intestinum progressa, iliis feminae latera sua innectit. (Aulus Cornelius Celsus, De Medicina, book 4, chapter 1 12:6)
(켈수스, 의학에 관하여, 4권, 1장 12:6)
deinde super rectum intestinum progressa, iliis feminae latera sua innectit. (Aulus Cornelius Celsus, De Medicina, book 4, I De human corporis interioribus partibus. 12:6)
(켈수스, 의학에 관하여, 4권, 12:6)
Oportet autem ante omnia resupinam mulierem transverso lecto sic collocare, ut feminibus ejus ipsius ilia comprimantur: (Aulus Cornelius Celsus, De Medicina, book 7, XXIX Qua ratione partus emortuus ex utero excutiatur. 1:4)
(켈수스, 의학에 관하여, 7권, 1:4)
Campesus impacta latus inter et ilia quercu tollitur ac mediam moriens descendit in hastam. (C. Valerius Catullus, Argonautica, C. Valeri Flacci Argonauticon Liber Sextus. 256:1)
(가이우스 발레리우스 카툴루스, 아르고나우티카, 256:1)
1. Caro means flesh in its general sense, as a material substance, in opp. to fat, nerves, muscles, and so forth; pulpa, especially, eatable and savory flesh, in opp. to bones; viscera, all flesh, and every fleshy substance between the skin and the bones. 2. Viscera, in a narrower sense, means generally, the inner parts of the body; whereas exta means the inner parts of the upper part of the body, as the heart, lungs, and so forth; intestina, interanea, and ilia, the inner parts of the lower part of the body, namely, the entrails; and indeed intestina, and, in the age after Augustus, interanea, meant the guts as digestive organs; ilia, all that is contained in the lower part of the body, and particularly those parts that are serviceable. (v. 145.)
출처: Döderlein's Hand-book of Latin Synonymes by Ludwig von Doederlein
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