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jugulārētur

고전 발음: [라:레:] 교회 발음: [라:레:]

형태정보

  • (jugulō의 과거 수동태 접속법 3인칭 단수형 ) (그는) iugulō어지고 있었다

    형태분석: jugul(어간) + ā(어간모음) + re(시제접사) + tur(인칭어미)

jugulō

1변화 동사; 이형 고전 발음: [로:] 교회 발음: [로:]

기본형: jugulō, jugulāre, jugulāvī, jugulātum

  1. iugulō
  1. Alternative form of iugulō.

활용 정보

1변화

예문

  • A dextro vero jugulo, si id fractum est, ad alam sinistram; (Aulus Cornelius Celsus, De Medicina, book 8, VIII De jugulo fracto. 5:3)

    (켈수스, 의학에 관하여, 8권, 5:3)

  • Quae jugulo composito circumdanda est saepius potius quam valentius: (Aulus Cornelius Celsus, De Medicina, book 8, VIII De jugulo fracto. 5:1)

    (켈수스, 의학에 관하여, 8권, 5:1)

유의어 사전

Interficere and perimere are the most general expressions for putting to death, in whatever manner, and from whatever motive, fame, veneno, suspendio, ferro, suppliciis, dolo, like κτείνειν; but interficere as a usual, perimere as an old, forcible, poetical expression. Interimere involves the accessory notion of privacy, as to remove out of the way; ἀναιρεῖν; necare, that of injustice, or, at least, cruelty, to murder, φονεύειν. Cic. Tusc. v. 20. Dionysius alterum jussit interfici, quia viam demonstravisset interimendi sui. Curt. ix. 7, 8. Boxum protinus placuit interfici; Biconem etiam per cruciatus necari. 2. Occidere, jugulare, trucidare, obtruncare, percutere, denote a sanguinary death-blow; occidere means by cutting down, especially the business of the soldier in honorable open battle; jugulare, by cutting the throat or neck, or rather by a skilfully-directed thrust into the collar-bone, especially the business of the bandit, after the pattern of the gladiator, like σφᾶξαι; obtruncare means to butcher, massacre, and cut to pieces, after the manner of the awkward murderer; trucidare, to slaughter as one would a steer, after the manner of the blood-thirsty miscreant, who, without meeting with resistance, plays the hero on the defenceless; percutere, to execute, as a mere mechanical act, after the manner of the headsman, or other executioner of a sentence of condemnation, or, at least, of a death-warrant. Senec. Contr. iii. 21. Nec dominum occidit, nec domino venenum dedit. Hor. Ep. i. 2. Ut jugulent hominem, surgunt de nocte latrones. Sallust. Fr. Cæteri vice pecorum obtruncantur; so that you may see a mangled mass of limbs, as in the heap of slain in a battle. Tac. Hist. . . . Juberet interfici; offerre se corpora iræ; trucidaret. Cic. Cat. iv. 6. and Rosc. Am. 34. Cujus consilio occisus sit invenio; cujus manu percussus sit non invenio. (iii. 181.)

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

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