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pursuing; darting, lambent, 8, 432; rapid, 5, 193.

sequestra, ae, f. (sequor), one with

whom something is placed in trust; sequestrā pāce, a mediatory peace; a truce, II, 133.

sequor, secutus sum, 3, dep. a., to follow, 1, 185; follow closely, pursue, 5, 227; seek after, pursue, 3, 327; seek to reach, seek, 4, 381; 10, 193; pursue a plan or course, 3, 368; compass, attain, find, 6, 457; follow in narrative, recount, 1, 342; follow; of words responding to the will, 12, 912; yield to the hand, 6, 146; attend, favor, 8, 15.

serēnō, āvī, ātus, I, a. and n. (serēnus),

to make clear or calm, 1, 255; spem serēnāre, to exhibit the calm or cheerful look of hope, 4, 477. serēnus, a, um, adj., clear, calm, tranquil, serene, 3, 518, et al.; fair, 2, 285; subst., serēnum, ī, n. (sc. caelum), a clear sky.

daughter of, 7, 331; subst., sata, ōrum, n., things sown or planted; grain, growing grain; crops, 3, 139. 2. serō (serui), sertus, 3, a., to join together; interweave, plait; interchange words; multa serere, to interweave many things, talk, commune much, 6, 160; subst., serta, ōrum, n., things entwined; garlands, festoons, wreaths, 1, 417, et al. serpēns, entis (gen. pl. serpentum, 8, 436), m. and f. (serpō), a creeping thing; snake, serpent, 2, 214, et al. serpō, serpsī, serptus, 3, n., to creep,

glide, 5, 91; steal on or over, 2, 269. Serrānus, ī, m. 1. Serranus, a sur

name in the Atilian gens, 6, 844. 2. A Rutulian, 9, 335.

sertum, ī, serta, ōrum, n., see 2. serō. sērum, see sērus.

sērus, a, um, adj., late, freq.; late in life, 6, 764; slow, tardy, 2, 373; too late, 5, 524; adv., sērum, late, 12, 864.

Serestus, i, m., a companion of Aeneas, serva, ae. f., a female slave, slave, 5,

1, 611, et al.

Sergestus, i, m., commander of one

of the ships of Aeneas, 1, 510, et al. Sergius, a, um, adj. (Sergius), of Sergius, founder of the Roman gens Sergia; Sergian, 5, 121.

seriēs, em, ē, f. (2. serō), a chain of things, train, row, succession, series, I, 641.

sermō, ōnis, m. (2. serō), the joining

of words; language, conversation, talk, discourse, 1, 217; report, rumor, 4, 189; speech, words, 12, 223; a language, 12, 834.

I. serō, sēvi, satus, 3, a., to sow or plant; with indefinite object omitted, 6, 844; scatter, spread, disseminate, 12, 228; p., satus, a, um, planted; begotten of, born of, sprung from, with abl., 2, 540; offspring, son of, 5, 244;

284.

servāns, antis, see servō.

serviō, īvī or ii, ītus, 4, n. (servus,

slave), to be a slave; dat., to serve, obey, 2, 786.

servitium, iī, n. (servus, slave), slavery, bondage, 3, 327.

servō, āvī, ātus, I, a., to save, 3, 86, et al.; reserve, I, 207; retain, keep, 6, 200; hold, 7, 179; continue, maintain, 10, 340; guard, 2, 450; keep, cherish, 1, 36; preserve, inherit, 7, 52; sit by, 2, 568; dwell, abide by, 6, 402; give heed to, watch, observe, 6, 338; 11, 200; p., servāns, antis (superl., servantissimus, a, um), observant, w. gen., 2, 427.

sẽscenti, ae, a, num. adj. (sex and centum), six hundred, 10, 172.

sēsē, see sui.

sētius, adv. (see secus), less, the less; haud sētius, not the less, 7, 781. seu, see sive.

1. sevērus, a, um, adj., stern, strict, exacting; controlled by inflexible laws or fate; fatal, dreadful, 6, 374.

2. Sevērus, ī, m., a mountain in the Sabine country, 7, 713.

Siculus, a, um, adj. (Siculi), pertaining to the Siculi, an ancient race, part of which migrated from Latium to Sicily; Sicilian, 1, 34, et al. sicut (sicutī), adv., so as, just as, even as, 8, 22.

sidereus, a, um, adj. (sīdus), abounding in stars, starry, 10, 3; starlighted, 3, 586; glittering, flashing, 12, 167.

sex, num. indecl. adj., six, 9, 272, et Sidicīnus, a, um, adj. (Sidicīnī), peral.

sī, conj., if, freq.; causal, if, indeed, since, 2, 102; equivalent to cum, 5, 64, et al.; whether, w. subj., 4, 110; w. indic., 1, 578; for Ō sī, would that, w. subj., 6, 187.

sībilō, 1, n. and a. (sībilus, a hissing), to hiss, 7, 447.

sībilus, a, um, adj., hissing, 2, 211, et

al.

Sibylla, ae, f., a prophetess, a sibyl; the Cumaean sibyl, Deiphobe, 3, 452, et al.

sic, adv., in this manner; in such a manner; so, thus; explanatory, 2, 440, et al.; referring to a preceding participle, 1, 225.

Sicānī, ōrum, m., the Sicanians or
Sicilians, 5, 293, et al.
Sicania, ae, f., Sicily, 1, 557.
Sicānus

(Sicānius), a, um, adj. (Sicānī), Sicilian, Sicanian, 5, 24, et al.

siccō, āvī, ātus, I, a. (siccus), to make dry, drain, suck; dry up, wipe away, 4, 687; wash, 10, 834. siccus, a, um, adj., dry, 3, 135; thirsty, dry, hungry, fasting, 2, 358; nearly equivalent to carēns or privātus, with abl. foll., drained of blood, 8, 261; hence, thirsting for blood, 9, 64; subst., siccum, i, n., dry ground, sand, or land, 10, 301. sīcubi, adv., if anywhere, 5, 677.

taining to the Sidicini, or people of Teanum and its territory in the northern part of Campania; Sidicinian, 7, 727.

sīdō, sīdī, 3, n., to seat one's self; perch, alight, 6, 203.

Sīdōn, ōnis, f., one of the capitals of Phoenicia, 1, 619.

Sidonius, a, um, adj., of Sidon; Si

donian; Phoenician, Tyrian, 1, 678, et al.

sīdus, eris, n., a constellation; fig., season, 4, 309; star, 6, 338; bright aspect; weather; storm, 12, 451; pl., sidera, um, weather, vicissitudes of weather, 5, 628.

Sīgēus, a, um, adj. (Sīgēum), pertain ing to Sigeum, a promontory and town in the Troad, at the mouth of the Dardanelles, about five miles northwest of Troy; Sigean, 2, 312. significō, āvī, ātus, I, a. and n. (signum and faciō), to make a sign, signal, beckon, 12, 692. signō, āvī, ātus, I, a. (sīgnum), to distinguish by a mark or symbol, 6, 780; mark, mark out; indicate, designate, 2, 697; inscribe, record, 3, 287; of the mind, observe, mark, notice, 2, 423.

signum, i, n., a sign, mark, impress;

token, 1, 443; sign, 3, 388; signal, of games, 5, 315; of battle, 10, 310; goal, 5, 130; figure, 1, 648; stand

ard, 7, 628; meton., a body of men | simplex, plicis, adj., uncompounded, following a standard, troop, battal

ion, 11, 517.

Sila, ae, f., an extensive forest in the

country of the Bruttii in Southern Italy, 12, 715.

silēns, entis, p. of sileō.

silentium, ii, n. (silēns), of the absence of any kind of sound; noiselessness, silence, stillness, 1, 730; pl., 2, 255.

sileō, uī, 2, n. and a., to be, keep, re

main silent, 2, 126; be hushed, calm, still, 1, 164; w. acc., to pass over in silence; leave unmentioned, unsung, 10, 793; p., silēns, entis (gen. pl. -tum, 6, 432), still, silent, noiseless, voiceless, 6, 264.

silēscō, 3, inc. n. (sileō), to become

still, 10, 10I.

silex, icis, m. and f., a hård stone, flint, 1, 174; rock, 6, 602; crag, 6, 471.

silva, ae, f., a forest, wood, or grove, 6,

444, et al.; stubble, 10, 406; fig., forest or mass of spears, 10, 887. Silvānus, ī, m. (silva), Silvanus, the god who presides over woods. silvestris, e, adj. (silva), pertaining to the woods and fields; sylvan, pastoral; living in the forest, 9, 673.

Silvia, ae, f. (silva), daughter of Tyr

rheus, 7, 487.

silvicola, ae, c. (silva and colō), an

inhabitant of the woods, 10, 551. Silvius, ii, m., the name of several of the descendants of Aeneas, who were kings of Alba, 6, 763.

similis, e, adj. (ċomp., similior, ius; superl., simillimus, a, um), like, similar, 1, 136, et al.

Simois, Simoentis, m., a river which falls into the Scamander near Troy, I, 100, et al.

simple; unmixed, 6, 747; single, one, the same.

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simul, adv., at once, together, at the same time, I, 144, et al.; w. abl. (cum being omitted), 5, 357; simul ac or atque, as soon as, 4, 90; without ac, as soon as, when; w. et, 1, 144; simul simul, and at the same time and, 1, 631; bothand, 1, 513, et al.; as soon as then, no sooner — -than, 12, 268. simulacrum, ī, n. (simulō), an effigy, an image, 2, 172; phantom, specter, ghost, apparition, 2, 772; representation, image, 5, 585.

simulō, āvī, ātus, I, a. (similis), to

make similar; imitate, 6, 591; pretend, 2, 17; to make a false show of, feign, I, 209; p., simulātus, a, um, made to imitate, counterfeiting, 4, 512; dissembling, 4, 105; imitating, resembling, 3, 349.

sin, conj. (sī and 2. nē), but if, if on

the contrary, 1, 555, et al. sine (cf. sē- or sēd-), prep. with abl., without, I, 133, et al.; connecting substantives, 6, 292; 10, 636. For sē- or sēd- in composition, see sẽ-. singulī, ae, a., distrib. num. adj., one by one; one each; separate, single, 3, 348, et al.; subst., singula, ōrum, n., all things individually, 1, 453; everything, every object or part, 8, 618.

singultō, no perf., ātus, I, n. and a., to sob, rattle in the throat, gulp, 9, 333.

singultus, ūs, m., a gasp. sinister, tra, trum, adj., left, 7, 689; on the left side or left hand, 6, 548; fig., wrong-headed, perverse, II, 347; adverse, inauspicious, unlucky, illboding; subst., sinistra, ae, f. (sc. manus), the left hand, 2, 443, et al.

sinō, sīvī, situs, 3, a., properly to lay | situs, ūs, m. (sinō), position; order,

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sinuōsus, a, um, adj. (sinus), winding, sociō, āvī, ātus, 1, a. (socius), to make

tortuous, 11, 753.

sinus, ūs, m., a fold, 1, 320; fig., sail, canvas, 5, 16; bosom, 4, 686; a gulf or bay, 1, 243; winding stream, a winding, 6, 132; a winding, curvature, depth, 1, 161; curving billow, II, 626.

Sīrēnes, um, f., the Sirens, fabulous beings, in the form of birds with the faces of virgins, dwelling on dangerous rocks near the coast of Campania, to which they attracted mariners by their songs, 5, 864.

1. Sirius, ii, m., Sirius or Canicula, the dog-star, 3, 141.

2. Sīrius, a, um, adj. (Sīrius), of the

dog-star; Sirian, 10, 273.

sistō, stiti, status, 3, a. and n., to cause to stand, put, set, place, w. abl. of place, 2, 245, et al.; place before one, bring, 4, 634; fix, plant, 10, 323; stop, 12, 355; arrest, stay, 6, 465; support, sustain, maintain, 6, 858; set, place, 6, 676; n., stand still, to stop, remain, abide, 3, 7; stand in fight, 11, 873. sīstrum, ī, n., a metallic rattle, consisting of a small frame of horseshoe form with sliding cross-bars, used by the priests of Isis, 8, 696. sitis, is, f., thirst; dryness, drought, 4,

42.

one a socius; to share, unite, associate, 1, 600; join in marriage, 12, 27.

1. socius, ii, m., an associate, ally, 9, 150; companion, friend, comrade, I, 198, et al.

2. socius, a, um, adj. (socius), allied, friendly, 3, 15; confederate, 2, 613; of one's country or countrymen, 5, 36; kindred, 3, 352.

sodālis, e, c., a comrade, companion, 10, 386.

sōl, sōlis, m., the sun, 1, 431, et al.; a

day, 3, 203; sunlight, 2, 475; as a god, Sōl, 1, 568, et al.; pl., sōlēs, day's, 3, 203.

sōlācium, in. (sōlor), a soothing;

solace, consolation, 5, 367. sōlāmen, inis, n. (sōlor), a means of consoling; a solace, 3, 661; consolation, 10.

soleō, solitus sum, 2, n., to be wont, accustomed, 2, 456; p., solitus, a, um, having been accustomed, wont, 9, 591; P., wonted, usual, habitual, 7, 357, et al.

solidus, a, um, adj., the whole, whole,

entire, 6, 253; massive, 2, 765; solid, hard, 6, 552; sound, unimpaired, 2, 639; subst., solidum, ī, n., solid ground; fig., 11, 427. solitus, a, um, p. of soleō.

solium, iī, n., a seat, 8, 178; throne, I, ! 506.

sollemnis, e, adj. (sollus, whole, and annus), coming at the completion of a year; annual; stated; ceremonial; religious, solemn, 5, 53; festive, 2, 202; customary, 12, 193; subst., sollemne, is, n., pl., sollemnia, ium, solemnities, sacrificial rites, offerings, 5, 605.

sollicitō, āvī, ātus, I, a. (solicitus), to stir up, agitate; try to pull out, 12, 404; make anxious, disquiet, disturb, 4, 380.

sollicitus, a, um, adj. (sollus, whole, and cieo), wholly excited; of the mind, solicitous, troubled, burdened with care, anxious, 3, 389. sōlor, ātus sum, I, dep. a., to solace,

console, 5, 770; assuage, comfort, aid, relieve, 5, 41; console one's self for, I, 239.

1. solum, ī, n., the bottom or ground of anything; soil, earth, ground, 1, 367, et al.; land, 3, 698; foundation, 10, 102; the water beneath a ship, as its support; the water, sea, 5, 199; support, table, 7, 111.

2. sōlum, see sõlus.

sõlus, a, um, adj., alone, sole, only, I, 664, et al.; solitary, 4, 82; lonely, 4, 462; remote, solitary, 11, 545; one only, an only, 7, 52; adv., sōlum, only.

solūtus, a, um, p. of solvō.

solvū, solvi, solūtus, 3, a. (2. sẽ- and

luō), to unbind, loosen, 6, 652, et al.; unfurl, 4, 574; unfasten, cast off, 5, 773; unyoke, unharness; of the hair, undo, dishevel, 3, 65, et al.; dissolve, confound, mix, 12, 205; separate, divide, 5, 581; fig., set free, release, disenthrall, 4, 487; exempt, release, 10, 111; break, 10, 91; pay, fulfill, perform, 3, 404; dispel, cast

off, banish, 4, 55; 1, 463; paralyze, I, 92; 12, 951; of sleep or drunkenness, relax, 5, 856; drown, 9, 189; pass., solvor, sink, 4, 530. somnifer, era, erum, adj. (somnus and fero), sleep-bringing; soothing, 7, 758.

somnium, ii, n. (somnus), a dream, 5, 840; personified, 6, 283. somnus, i, m., sleep, slumber, 1, 680, et al.; a dream, 1, 353; night, I, 470, et al.; personif., Somnus, the god of sleep, 5, 838, et al. sonāns, antis, see sonō. sonipēs, edis, adj. (sonus and pēs), noisy-hoofed; subst. m., horse, courser, steed, 4, 135.

sonitus, ūs, m. (sono), a sounding;

noise, 2, 732, et al.; roaring, 2, 209; thunder, 6, 586.

sonō, sonuī, sonitus, I, n. and a., to sound, resound, freq.; murmur, 3, 442, et al.; chirp, 12, 477; rattle, 4, 149; roar, 1, 246; thunder, 2, 113; w. acc., indicate by sound, betray, reveal, 1, 328; boast, 12, 529; P., sonāns, antis, sounding, resounding, murmuring, rustling, rattling, freq.

sonor, ōris, m. (sonō), a noise, sound;

clash, clang, din, 9, 651.

sonōrus, a, um, adj. (sonor), loudsounding; roaring, 1, 53; ringing, resounding, 12, 712.

sōns, sontis, adj., hurtful; guilty, 6, 570.

sonus, i, m. (sonō), a sound, noise, 2, 728.

sōpiō, īvi or ii, ītus, 4, a. (sopor), to

put to sleep; p., sõpītus, a, um, lulled to sleep, 1, 680; slumbering, 5, 743.

sopor, ōris, m., sleep; sound, deep slumber, 2, 253; personified, 6, 278.

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