고전 발음: []교회 발음: []
기본형: sēcessiō, sēcessiōnis
단수 | 복수 | |
---|---|---|
주격 | sēcessiō | sēcessiōnēs |
속격 | sēcessiōnis | sēcessiōnum |
여격 | sēcessiōnī | sēcessiōnibus |
대격 | sēcessiōnem | sēcessiōnēs |
탈격 | sēcessiōne | sēcessiōnibus |
호격 | sēcessiō | sēcessiōnēs |
Quotienscumque sit decretum, darent operam magistratus, ne quid res publica detrimenti caperet (qua voce et quo senatus consulto populus Romanus ad arma sit vocatus), factum in perniciosis legibus, in vi tribunicia, in secessione populi templis locisque editioribus occupatis: (CAESAR, COMMENTARIORVM DE BELLO CIVILI, PRIMVS 7:7)
(카이사르, 내란기, 1권 7:7)
nulla lex promulgata, non cum populo agi coeptum, nulla secessio facta. (CAESAR, COMMENTARIORVM DE BELLO CIVILI, PRIMVS 7:10)
(카이사르, 내란기, 1권 7:10)
Divulgato Domiti consilio milites, qui erant Corfinii, prima vesperi secessionem faciunt atque ita inter se per tribunos militum centurionesque atque honestissimos sui generis colloquuntur: (CAESAR, COMMENTARIORVM DE BELLO CIVILI, PRIMVS 20:1)
(카이사르, 내란기, 1권 20:1)
Magna secessione a tumultu rerum labentium, mihi crede, opus est, ut non duritia, non audacia, non cupiditate inanis gloriae, non superstitiosa credulitate fiat in homine nihil timere. (Augustine, Saint, Epistulae. Selections., 3. (A. D. 389 Epist. X) Nebridio Augustinus 2:6)
(아우구스티누스, 편지들, 2:6)
Nec actum quicquam secus existimes, vel susurrantes perniciosa malignos admittas, ad compendia sua excitare secessiones principum assuetos; (Ammianus Marcellinus, Rerum Gestarum libri qui supersunt, Liber XX , chapter 8 11:2)
(암미아누스 마르켈리누스, 사건 연대기, , 8장 11:2)
Turbæ and tumultus denote the civil broils of public life; turbæ (τύρβη) interruptions of public order; tumultus (from tumere) of the public peace; whereas seditio and secessio are political commotions, in consequence of decided, evident differences of opinion, and of conflicting principles; seditio (from se and ire) when concord is first disturbed, and the parties as yet contend with words only; secessio, when the prospect of reconciliation is already given up, and the parties either stand opposite each other, ready to come to blows, or, at least, have broken off all connection with each other. 2. The seditiosi and secedentes are citizens and members of a free community, and only suspend public concord; whereas the deficientes and desciscentes break a compact, because, either as subjected states they rebel, or as allies fall off; deficere, as the most general expression, represents the falling off, in a moral point of view, as a treacherous, fickle, cowardly desertion; desciscere (from scindere) in a political point of view, as an alteration in the constitution and political system. (v. 363.)
출처: Döderlein's Hand-book of Latin Synonymes by Ludwig von Doederlein
전체 데이터 내 출현빈도: 약 0.0009%
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