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기본형: līmus, līmī
Surrentina vafer qui miscet faece Falerna vina, columbino limum bene colligit ovo,quatenus ima petit volvens aliena vitellus. (SERMONVM Q. HORATI FLACCI, SECVNDVS, 04 4:36)
(호라티우스의 풍자, 2권, 04장 4:36)
ea aes cyprum limis crassis uti scobis facta mixta conspargitur, ut conglomeretur; (Vitruvius Pollio, De Architectura, LIBER SEPTIMUS, chapter 11 12:4)
(비트루비우스 폴리오, 건축술에 관하여, , 11장 12:4)
itemque in aeneo si ea aqua defervefacta et postea requieta et defusa fuerit, neque in eius aenei fundo harena aut limus invenietur, ea aqua erit item probata. (Vitruvius Pollio, De Architectura, LIBER OCTAVUS, chapter 4 5:5)
(비트루비우스 폴리오, 건축술에 관하여, , 4장 5:5)
limus enim cum habuerit, quo subsidat, limpidior fiet et sine odoribus conservabit saporem. (Vitruvius Pollio, De Architectura, LIBER OCTAVUS, chapter 6 7:71)
(비트루비우스 폴리오, 건축술에 관하여, , 6장 7:71)
Omnis autem circumfluo ambitu Pontus et nebulosus est, et dulcior aequorum ceteris et vadosus, quod et concrescit aer ex umorum spiramine saepe densatus, et irruentium undarum magnitudine temperatur, et consurgit in brevia dorsuosa, limum glebasque aggerente multitudine circumvenientium fluentorum. (Ammianus Marcellinus, Rerum Gestarum libri qui supersunt, Liber XXII: Julianus, chapter 8 46:1)
(암미아누스 마르켈리누스, 사건 연대기, , 8장 46:1)
1. Lutum, limus, cœnum, all denote impurity, as a substance, and as of a wet sort; lutum (from λύθρον) is the dirt of the streets or roads, like πηλός; limus (λειβόμενος) the mud of a river, like ἰλύς; cœnum (from cunire) the mire of a moor or morass, like βόρβορος. Tac. Ann. i. 63. Cætera limosa, tenacia gravi cœno aut rivis incerta erant; whereas sordes, squalor, pœdor, situs, denote impurities as a form, and of a dry sort; sodes (from ἄρδα) in opp. to splendor, through indigence, or niggardliness and vulgarity, for example, clothes dirty from long wear, like ῥύπος; squalor (from σκέλλω) in opp. to nitor, through want of civilized habits, and of delicacy in the senses, for example uncombed hair, like αὐχμός; pædor (from ψοῖθος) in opp. to munditiæ, through neglect of the person, for example, through pædiculos, vermin, itch, etc., like πίνος; situs (ἄσις) in opp. to usus, in consequence of long disuse, for example, through mould, rust, etc., like ἄζη. Hence the different forms of the adjectives lutosus, limosus, cœnosus, that is, full of lutum, etc.; and of sordidus, squalidus, pædidus, that is, resembling sordes, etc., and in circumlocution, oblitus luto, limo, cœno, but obsitus, sordibus, squalore, pædore. 2. Stercus (from τάργανον) denotes in dung its disgusting sense, as filth, like κόπρος; whereas fimus (opimus?) in its useful sense, as manure. 3. For offensive excrements cœnum is the most general; oletum denotes human; merda (μίνθος) animal excrements.
출처: Döderlein's Hand-book of Latin Synonymes by Ludwig von Doederlein
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