praep., with abl.
— Of separation, in space,
from, away from, down from, out of
: de finibus suis exire, Cs.: decedere de provinciā: qui de castris
processerant, S.: ferrum de manibus extorsimus: de muro
se deiecerunt, Cs.: de iugis, quae ceperant,
funduntur, L. — Fig., from, away from, out of: exire de vitā: de priscis Latinis capta oppida,
L.: de sententiā deiectus.—In time,
of immediate sequence, after, directly after: statim de auctione:
diem de die prospectans, day after day, L.—Of duration,
during, in the course of, at, by: de nocte: multā de
nocte, late at night: de mediā
nocte, Cs.: de tertiā
vigiliā, in the third night-watch, Cs.: adparare de die convivium, in open day, T.: mediā de luce, H.: navigare de mense
Decembri, in December. — Of origin or source, of, from, from
among, out of, proceeding from, derived from: caupo de
viā Latinā: nescio qui de circo maximo: homo de
scholā: aliquis de ponte, i. e. a beggar, Iu.: Priami de stirpe, V.: recita de
epistulā reliqua: hoc audivi de patre: discere id de me,
T.—Of the whole, of, from, from among, out of: hominem
misi de comitibus meis: percussus ab uno de illis: quemvis de iis qui essent
idonei: accusator de plebe: unus de legatis: partem solido demere de
die, H.: expers partis de nostris bonis, T.:
si quae sunt de eodem genere: cetera de genere hoc,
H.—Of material, of, out of, from: solido de marmore
templum, V.: de templo carcerem fieri: de
scurrā divitem fieri posse: fies de rhetore consul, Iu.
— Esp., of a fund out of which costs are taken: potat,
ole<*> unguenta, de meo, T.: de suo: stipendium de
publico statuit, L.: non solum de die, sed etiam in
diem vivere, on the day's resources.—Of cause, for, on
account of, by reason of, because of, from, through, by: quā de causā, Cs.: certis de
causis: de quo nomine ad arbitrum adisti: de gestu intellego quid respondeas:
incessit passu de volnere tardo, O.: de Atticae
febriculā valde dolui.—Of measure or standard,
according to, after, in accordance with: De eius consilio velle
se facere, T.: de amicorum sententiā
Romam confugit: de more vetusto rapuere faces, V.—Of
relation, of, about, concerning, in respect to: multa narrare de
Laelio. senatus de bello accepit, learned of, S.: Consilium summis de rebus habere, V.: legati de
pace ad Caesarem venerant, Cs.: de bene vivendo
disputare: de me experior, in my own case.—In gen., in
reference to, with respect to, concerning, in the matter of: non
est de veneno celata mater: Aeduis de iniuriis satisfacere, for, Cs.:
quid de his fieri placeat, S.: concessum ab nobilitate de consule plebeio, L.: ut
sciam quid de nobis futurum sit: de argento somnium, as for the money,
T.: de benevolentiā, primum, etc.: de
Samnitibus triumphare, over. — In adverbial expressions, de integro, anew,
afresh, once more: ratio de integro ineunda est mihi,
T.: de integro funus iam sepulto filio
facere.—De improviso, unexpectedly: ubi de
inprovisost interventum mulieri, T.: de improviso
venire, Cs.—De transverso, unexpectedly: de traverso L. Caesar ut veniam ad se rogat.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.
An XML version of this text is available for download, with the additional restriction that you offer Perseus any modifications you make. Perseus provides credit for all accepted changes, storing new additions in a versioning system.