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라틴어-한국어 사전 검색

intermorior

3변화 io 변화 동사; 이상동사 고전 발음: [] 교회 발음: []

기본형: intermorior, intermorī, intermortuus sum

  1. 몰래 죽다, 홀로 죽다
  2. 쇠퇴하다
  3. 기절하다, 까무러치다
  1. I die in secret, or unobserved
  2. I decay or become neglected
  3. I swoon

활용 정보

3변화 io 변화

예문

  • Vocem enim quasi parturientis audivi, angustias ut puerperae; vox filiae Sion intermorientis expandentisque manus suas: " Vae mihi, quia defecit anima mea propter interfectores! ". (Biblia Sacra Vulgata, Liber Ieremiae, 4 4:31)

    나는 몸 푸는 여인이 내는 듯한 소리를, 첫아기를 낳는 여인처럼 괴로워하는 소리를 들었다. 손을 뻗쳐 들고 헐떡이는 딸 시온의 소리를 들었다. "불행하여라, 이 내 목숨! 살인자들 앞에서 내 힘이 다해 가는구나." (불가타 성경, 예레미야서, 4장 4:31)

  • ita plerique omnes iam sunt intermortui. (T. Maccius Plautus, Trinummus, act 1, scene 1 1:4)

    (티투스 마키우스 플라우투스, , , 1:4)

  • multique etiam ex profluvio sanguinis intermorientes ante ullam curationem vino reficiendi sunt, quod alioqui inimicissimum vulneri est. (Aulus Cornelius Celsus, De Medicina, Liber V, chapter 26 27:218)

    (켈수스, 의학에 관하여, , 26장 27:218)

  • multique etiam ex profluuio sanguinis intermorientes ante ullam curationem uino reficiendi sunt, quod alioqui inimicissimum uulneri est. (Aulus Cornelius Celsus, De Medicina, book 5, chapter 26 46:2)

    (켈수스, 의학에 관하여, 5권, 26장 46:2)

  • Multique etiam ex profluvio sanguinis intermorientes ante ullam curationem vino reficiendi sunt: (Aulus Cornelius Celsus, De Medicina, book 5, XXVI De quinque generibus noxarum corporis et primo de vulneribus. 53:3)

    (켈수스, 의학에 관하여, 5권, 53:3)

유의어 사전

1. Mors and letum denote a natural death; mors (μόρος) the usual expression in a merely physical sense, as the way to corruption, like θάνατος; letum (from λαχεῖν, λάχεσις,) the select and solemn expression, as the lot of death, like οἶτος; whereas nex (from νεκρός) a violent death, as the passive of cædes. 2. Mors, letum, nex, are proper, whereas obitus and interitus only softer, expressions. Obitus, decease, denotes, like exitus, a natural death; whereas interitus, together with perire, usually denotes, like exitium, a violent death. Plin. Ep. iii. 7. Silius ultimus ex Neronianis consularibus obiit, quo consule Nero periit. Plaut. Epid. iii. 4, 56. Malo cruciatu pereas, atque obeas cito. 3. Perire represents death as destruction and corruption; interire as a vanishing, so that the former applies more to the body, the latter to the soul. Plaut. Capt. iii. 5, 32. Qui per virtutem periit, at non interit; that is, he who dies a noble death, though his body perishes, still lives in name and posthumous renown. Further, perire denotes a sudden and violent death, particularly by self-murder; interire, a gradual and painful, but, it may be, also a peaceful, death. Tac. Ann. xv. 44. Et pereuntibus Christianis addita ludibria, ut ferarum tergis contecti laniatu canum interirent. Serv. ap. Cic. Fam. iv. 5. Si quis nostrum interiit, aut occisus est. 4. Obire mortem denotes to die, as a physical event, by which one ends all suffering; whereas oppetere mortem denotes to die, as a moral act, in as far as a man, if he does not seek death, at any rate awaits it with firmness and contempt of it. 5. Demori denotes to die off, as one belonging to a society, and thereby to occasion a vacancy; intermori, to be apparently dying, to be sick of a lingering disease, like ἐκθανεῖν; emori, to die entirely, in opp. to a mere semblance of life in misfortune, slavery, and disgrace, like πανδίκωσ θανεῖν. Cic. Pis. 7. Ut emori potius quam servire præstaret. (iii. 182.)

출처: Döderlein's Hand-book of Latin Synonymes by Ludwig von Doederlein

유의어

  1. 쇠퇴하다

관련어

명사

형용사

동사

부사

파생어

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