I.out through the doors, out of doors, forth, out (class.): “crepuit foris: Amphitruo exit foras,” Plaut. Am. 1, 2, 35; cf.: “exeundum hercle tibi hinc est foras,” id. Aul. 1, 1, 1: “i foras, mulier,” id. Cas. 2, 2, 36: “quid tu foras egressa es?” id. Am. 5, 1, 28; Ter. Phorm. 5, 6, 38: “foras aedibus me eici?” Plaut. As. 1, 2, 1; cf.: homo hercle hinc exclusu'st foras, id. ib. 3, 3, 6: “anum foras extrudit,” id. Aul. prol. 38; id. Cas. 4, 1, 10: “te huc foras seduxi, Ut, etc.,” id. Aul. 2, 1, 14: “sese portā foras universi proripiunt,” Caes. B. C. 2, 12, 1: “portis se foras erumpunt,” id. ib. 2, 14, 1: “fer cineres, Amarylli, foras,” Verg. E. 8, 101: “filium foras mittere ad cenam,” Cic. Verr. 2, 1, 26, § 65: “quae (urbs) laetari mihi videtur, quod tantam pestem evomuerit forasque projecerit,” id. Cat. 2, 1, 2: “vides, tuum peccatum esse elatum foras,” Ter. Phorm. 5, 7, 65; cf.: “domus, in qua nihil geratur, quod foras perferendum sit,” Cic. Cael. 23, 57; and: “efferri hoc foras et ad populi Romani aures pervenire,” id. Phil. 10, 3, 6; cf. Lucr. 3, 123: “si (animus) eminebit foras, et ea quae extra sunt contemplans, etc.,” Cic. Rep. 6, 26; cf.: justitia foras spectat et projecta tota est atque eminet, id. Fragm. ap. Non. 373, 25 (Rep. 3, 7 ed. Mos.): (scripta) foras dare, to spread abroad, publish, = edere, proferre, id. Att. 13, 22, 3: “vendere,” Plaut. Stich. 1, 3, 66: “locitare agellum,” to strangers, Ter. Ad. 5, 8, 26: “uxor, vade foras, aut moribus utere nostris,” i. e. leave the house, separale from me, Mart. 11, 104, 1.—
(β).
Connected with a noun: “ite hac simul heri damnigeruli, foras gerones, Bonorum hamaxagogae,” carriers out, Plaut. Truc. 2, 7, 1.—
(γ).
Post-class. with gen., or like a preposition with the acc.: ea namque tabes, si foras corporis prospiravit, out of the body, ἐκτὸς τοῦ σώματος, App. Mag. p. 306, 11: “extra urbem et foras portam,” outside of, without, Hier. in Matt. 27, 33; so, “foras exteriorem partem,” Vulg. Ezech. 47, 2: “usque foras civitatem,” id. Act. 21, 5.—