Horace, Satire 1.4.63-81 Flashcards
hāctenus
thus far, so far, of space and time; thus far (separated by tmesis)
aliās
at another time, some other time, at other times
poēma poēmae f.
poem
tantum
so much, so far; hardly, only; in tantum, to such a degree or height, so high; tantum — quantum, so great (such, so much) — as.
meritō
deservedly; rightly
Sulcius –iī m.
A Roman name
Caprius –iī m.
A Roman name
raucus –a –um
harsh–sounding, noisy
uterque utraque utrumque
which (of two), whichever, no matter which; one, either, one or other; (w/que) each/either (of two); both (separately); each side (pl.), each set
Caelius –iī m.
Caelius (a name); M. Caeilius Rufus, the friend of Cicero
Birrus –ī m.
A Roman name
Caper Caprī m.
A Roman name
taberna tabernae f.
hut, cabin, cottage; tavern, inn, shop
pīla –ae f.
a pier; mole
libellus libellī m.
booklet, little book
insūdō – āre
to sweat on
Tigellius –(i)ī m.
Tigellius, the name of a well-known musician
ubivīs
anywhere you like, no matter where
corām
in person, face–to–face; in one’s presence, before one’s eyes; publicly, openly
quīlubet quaelubet quodlubet
whoever or whatever you please; anyone, anything
suāvis suāve
agreeable, pleasant, gratifying, sweet; charming, attractive
haud
not at all, by no means
num
introduces a direct question expecting the answer “no”; (introduces an Indirect Question) whether
laedō laedere laesī laesus
to strike; hurt, injure, wound; offend, annoy
prāvus –a –um
crooked; subst., pravum, i, n., perverseness, wrong, evil, falsehood
quī quae quod
some, any; what…, which…; who, which, that