to announce, declare, denounce, menace, threaten,
intimate, order, command: inimicitias mihi: populo R.
servitutem: ab amico timor denuntiari solet?: sese procuratorem esse: eos cavendos esse:
quid de summā rei p. sentires: mihi, ut ad te scriberem: ante denuntio,
abstineant, etc.: venisset, si esset denuntiatum.—In public life, to announce,
intimate, declare, pronounce, proclaim, direct, order, command: bellum, quod denuntiatum indictumque non esset: se non neglecturum, etc.,
Cs.: se scire quae fierent, Cs.: populo,
Aemilium pugnasse, etc., L.: Gallonio, ut excederet
Gadibus, gave orders, Cs.: per vicos
urbīsque, ut commeatūs expedirent, L.: ei senatus, ne oppugnaret, etc.: venerant denuntiatum Fabio
senatūs verbis, ne, etc., L.: Gallicis populis,
multitudinem suam domi contineant, L.: centurionibus
exsequi, Ta.—In religion, to portend, threaten, foretell, warn,
direct: quibus portentis magna populo R. bella
denuntiabantur: Celaeno tristīs denuntiat iras, V.: a deo
denuntiatum, ut exeamus e vitā.—In law, to give formal
notice: iudici: domum, to serve notice at the house:
testimonium eis, summon them as witnesses: in iudicium, give notice to attend: fratres
saltem ex hibe: ‘non denuntiavi,’ I have not summoned
them: de isto fundo Caecinae, to serve notice of an action:
in foro denuntiat fundum illum suum esse, makes
claim.—Fig., of things, to give notice, make known, signify, indicate:
terra adventūs hostium multis indiciis ante denuntiat:
illa arma non periculum nobis denuntiant: Caeruleus (color) pluviam
denuntiat, V.: hoc data arma denuntiant, Ta.
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