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기본형: nepōs, nepōtis
Cum edita essent, scripsit Nepoti iussisse se pecuniam solvi adiecta contumeliosa admonitione. (Seneca, De Beneficiis, Liber II 27:4)
(세네카, 행복론, 27:4)
ceterum in nullius umquam suorum necem duravit, neque mortem nepoti pro securitate privigni inlatam credibile erat. (Cornelius Tacitus, Annales, LIBER I, chapter 6 6:5)
(코르넬리우스 타키투스, 연대기, , 6장 6:5)
sed non arma, non rerum novarum studium, amores iuvenum et impudicitiam nepoti obiectabat. (Cornelius Tacitus, Annales, LIBER V FRAGMENTVM, chapter 3 3:6)
(코르넬리우스 타키투스, 연대기, , 3장 3:6)
mox, quia rumor incedebat fore ut nuru ac nepoti conciliaretur Caesar, saevitiam quam paenitentiam maluit. (Cornelius Tacitus, Annales, book 6, chapter 23 23:6)
(코르넬리우스 타키투스, 연대기, 6권, 23장 23:6)
Iuliam L. Paulo censoris filio, Agrippinam Germanico sororis suae nepoti collocauit. (C. Suetonius Tranquillus, De Vita Caesarum, Divus Augustus, chapter 64 1:2)
(가이우스 수에토니우스 트란퀼루스, 황제전, , 64장 1:2)
Prodigus and profusus denote prodigality, as a single feature in a man’s character; prodigus (from δέχω?) inasmuch as he regards not the value of money, and neither can nor will carefully put it out to interest, from a genial disposition, as the squanderer; profusus, inasmuch as he thinks nothing too dear, that can minister to his pleasures, from levity of character, as the spendthrift; whereas helluo and nepos denote prodigality as pervading the whole character, which shows itself fully in the quality of prodigality; helluo (from χλιδή) the habitual gourmand and glutton; nepos (ἀναπότης) a young and harebrained prodigal, who runs through his own property and that of his parents. (vi. 286.)
출처: Döderlein's Hand-book of Latin Synonymes by Ludwig von Doederlein
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