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59 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

Polyphēmon

Greek accusative (Latin: Polyphēmum)

adspiciō, adspicere, adspexī, adspectum

look upon

adspiciam

may I look upon (subjunctive, which is correct in the context; adspiciam is also the 1st person singular future -`I will look upon')

veneror, -ārī, -ātus sum

revere, honour

spīrō, -āre, -āvī, -ātum

breathe

immemor. immemoris

unmindful

cārus, -a, -um

dear

alvus, -ī f

stomach

condō, condere, condidī, conditum

bury, hide, found

inclāmō, -āre, -āvī, -ātum

cry out

prōdō, prōdere, prōdidī, prōditum

hand over, betray (a compound of prō and )

immānis, immāne

huge

scopulus, -ī m

rock

tormentum, -ī n

catapult

iaculor, -ārī, -ātum

throw, hurl

obambulō, -āre, -āvī, -ātum

stumble over, prowl about, wander over

Aetna, -ae f

Mt. Aetna (volcano in NE Sicily)

praetemptō, -āre, -āvī, -ātum

feel, try out

orbus, -a, -um (with ablative)

deprived of

rūpēs, rūpis m

rock, cliff

incursō, -āre, -āvī, -ātum (+ dative)

stumble against, bump into

foedō, -āre, -āvī, -ātum

stain, polllute

prōtendō, prōtendere, prōtendī, prōtentum/prōtēnsum

stretch out

exsecror, exsecrārī, exsecrātus sum

curse

Achīvus, -a, -um

Greek

cāsus, cāsūs m

chance, accident, case (grammatical), fall

saeviō, saevīre, saeviī, saevītum

rage, be violent

viscera, viscerum n pl

entrails

edō, edere/ēsse, ēdī, ēsum

eat, devour (do not confuse this verb with ēdō, ēdere, ēdidī, ēditum (compound of ē and ), give out, publish)

laniō, laniāre, laniāvī, laniātum

tear to pieces

inundō, -āre, -āvī, -ātum

overflow, inundate

artus, -ūs m

limb

guttur, gutturis n

throat

trepidō, trepidāre, trepidāvī, trepidātum

quiver

lūridus, -a, -um

pale, ghastly

occupō, -āre, -āvī, -ātum

seize

latitō, -āre, -āvī, -ātum

hide (intransitive)

strepitus, -ūs m

noise

cupidus, -a, -um

desiring

morīrī

= morī (infinitive of morior, die)

morior, morī, mortuus sum

die

gestus, -ūs m

gesture

tremiscō, tremiscere (also tremēscō)

tremble

rēgnō, -āre, -āvī, -ātum

be king, rule over (in transitive sense only used in the passive in Ovid's time)

famēs, famis f

hunger

cohibeō, cohibēre, cohibuī, cohibitum

hold together, confine

carcer, carceris m

prison, starting gate (the second meaning probably developed from the first rather than the other way round as stated by the book; the basic meaning is `enclosed place')

bōs, bovis c

ox, cow

inclūdō, inclūdere, inclūsī, inclūsum

include, shut up, confine

tergum, -ī n

skin, hide, back

mūnus, mūneris n

gift, function, post

Dūlichius, -ī m

Dulichian (used for Ulysses, from the name of a smaller island near Ithaca.)

flātus, -ūs m

blowing wind, breeze

sūmō, sūmere, sūmpsī, sūmptum

take

invidia, -ae f

envy

reor, rērī, ratus sum

think

retrō

backwards

tyrannus, -ī m

king

portus, -ūs m

port, harbour