umbra
umbra
ae,
f
a shade, shadow: terrae: colles . .
. adferunt umbram vallibus: noctis se condidit umbris, V.: pampineae, of vines, V.: Falce premes
umbram, i. e. prune the foliage, V.—Prov.: qui umbras timet, is
afraid of shadows.—A shaded place, place protected from the sun, shade:
Umbra loco deerat, i. e. trees, O.: Pompeiā spatiere sub umbrā, in the Pompeian portico,
O.: vacuā tonsoris in umbrā, in the
cool barber's shop, H.: rhetorica, i. e. the rhetorician's
school, Iu.—In painting, a dark place, shade, shadow: quam
multa vident pictores in umbris et in eminentiā.—Of
the dead, a shade, ghost: Pulvis et umbra sumus, H.:
Cornea (porta), quā veris facilis datur exitus
umbris, V.: Umbrarum rex, i. e. Pluto, O.:
matris agitabitur umbris, O.—A shadow,
attendant, companion: cum Servilio Vibidius, quas Maecenas adduxerat
umbras, H.—A grayling, umber (a fish): corporis umbrae Liventis,
O.—Fig., a shadow, trace, image, appearance, outline, semblance, pretence,
pretext: civitatis: umbras falsae gloriae consectari: umbrae hominum,
fame frigore evecti, L.: Mendax pietatis,
O.—A shelter, cover, protection: umbra et recessus: sub
umbrā vestri auxilii latere, L.—Rest, leisure:
docere in umbrā atque otio: ignava Veneris,
O.: cedat umbra soli, i. e. repose to exertion.