... Ilignus and Palpitatio ; Cardiopalmus , Tussis is also named Bexis , Oneirodynia gravans is here seen under the title of Pnigalion ; and Angina pectoris , Prigophobia . Dyspepsia is described by the usual terms ; and a few general ...
... ilignus , of the scarlet - oak , oaken ; salix , -icis , a willow , saligneus and salignus , made of willows . 13. icus . The termination icus denotes belonging , or re- lating to the thing expressed by the Primitive . The Ad- jectives ...
... ilignus iligneus I 366 , II 145 . illustris I 369 , II 140 , IV 196 . im III 333 . imbellis II 281 . imber II 184 . imberbis II 281 . impensa II 474 . im - petrassere IV 465 . impletus IV 119 . im - pluo I 152 . imus II 168 . in I 51 ...
... ilignus . 32. Di¿resis . Di¿resis is the division of a diphthong into two syllables . In most of the cases in Homer where di¿resis was formerly assumed it is now plain that the older form of the word appears . Thus patronymics in -dns ...
... ilignus ; quercus , querneus , or quernus ; populus , populneus , or populnus . From fagus and cedrus , however , we have faginus and cedrinus , in which the is the connecting vowel . In like manner we have eburneus , and eburnus , from ...
... ilignus . The words from which these are derived - decet , lego , ilex - all have a short e vowel , and it is necessary to explain the change of ě to . Now such a change does regularly take place before the sound [ n ] ; beside Greek ...
... ilignus ; from alter , alternus ' alternate ; ' from [ exterus ] , externus ; from inferus , infernus . Pronus comes from pro ' forwards . ' Of the same origin are the distributive numerals bini ' two - a - piece , ' terni , quaterni ...
... ilignus from ilex , or the loan - word cygnus from Kúκvos " ( Lindsay , Latin Language , p . 292 ) . Whether Vergil preferred the Latin or the Greek form it is impossible to determine . But see Norden , ad loc .; the MSS . from whose ...
... ilignus , querneus and quernus , sa- ligneus and salignus . 2. icus expresses belonging or relating to a thing ; e . g . , classicus , from classis ; civicus , relating to a citizen ; dominicus , belonging to a master ; rusticus , rural ...