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기본형: nōtitia, nōtitiae
Gallis autem provinciarum propinquitas et transmarinarum rerum notitia multa ad copiam atque usus largitur, (CAESAR, COMMENTARIORVM DE BELLO GALLICO, SEXTVS, XXIV 24:5)
(카이사르, 갈리아 전기, 6권, 24장 24:5)
qui ad Auximum, ut supra demonstravimus, amissis cohortibus protinus ex fuga in Africam pervenerat atque eam sua sponte vacuam occupaverat delectuque habito duas legiones effecerat, hominum et locorum notitia et usu eius provinciae nactus aditus ad ea conanda, quod paucis ante annis ex praetura eam provinciam obtinuerat. (CAESAR, COMMENTARIORVM DE BELLO CIVILI, PRIMVS 31:3)
(카이사르, 내란기, 1권 31:3)
Qui duabus de causis eo die dimicare nolebat, quod et nullos milites in navibus habebat et post horam X diei res agebatur, nox autem allatura videbatur maiorem fiduciam illis, qui locorum notitia confidebant; (CAESAR, INCERTI AVCTORIS DE BELLO ALEXANDRINO 10:6)
(카이사르, 알렉산드리아 전기 10:6)
Quod risi locorum notitia reliqui se texissent partimque in navis quibus flumen transierant recepissent, funditus deleti essent. (CAESAR, INCERTI AVCTORIS DE BELLO ALEXANDRINO 27:9)
(카이사르, 알렉산드리아 전기 27:9)
sine quorum notitia neminem putant vel occurrere vel mederi morbis inter haec nascentibus posse. (Aulus Cornelius Celsus, De Medicina, Liber I, Prooemium 1:50)
(켈수스, 의학에 관하여, , 1:50)
1. Cognitio is an act of the mind by which knowledge is acquired, whereas notitia and scientia denote a state of the mind; notitia, together with nosse, denotes a state of the merely receptive faculties of the mind, which brings an external appearance to consciousness, and retains it there; whereas scientia, together with scire, involves spontaneous activity, and a perception of truth; notitia may be the result of casual perception; scientia implies a thorough knowledge of its object, the result of mental activity. Cic. Sen. 4, 12. Quanta notitia antiquitatis! quanta scientia juris Romani! 2. The ignarus is without notitia, the inscius without scientia. Tac. H. i. 11. Ægyptum provinciam insciam legum, ignaram magistratuum; for legislation is a science, and must be studied; government an art, and may be learnt by practice. 3. Inscius denotes a person who has not learnt something, with blame; nescius, who has accidentally not heard of, or experienced something, indifferently. Cic. Brut. 83. Inscium omnium rerum et rudem. Compare this with Plin. Ep. viii. 23, Absens et impendentis mali nescius. (v. 266.)
출처: Döderlein's Hand-book of Latin Synonymes by Ludwig von Doederlein
전체 데이터 내 출현빈도: 약 0.0040%
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