ex-armo
ex-armo, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a., to deprive of arms, to disarm (post-Aug.). Lit.: cohortes, Tac. H. 2, 76 fin.: dextras, Luc. 5, 356: Medos, id. 8, 387; Col. 7, 3, 5; cf. Lampr. Hel. 21.— Transf. Navem, i. e. to unrig, dismantle, Sen. Cons. ad Helv. 17, 6; id. Contr. 3, 15, 9.—Absol., to lose the rigging of a ship: et si exarmavit, tamen reliquias navigii aptat ad cursum, Sen. Ep. 30, 3; cf. Dig. 14, 2, 2.— (Causa pro effectu.) To deprive of strength, to weaken: serpentem diro veneno, i. e. to render harmless, Sil. 1, 411; so, taurum, Val. Fl. 7, 597: tigres, Manil. 4, 235: aequor (terrae cingentes), Claud. Epigr. 35, 4: Romani exarmati, weakened, Vell. 2, 17 Ruhnk.— Trop., to disarm: filium mater Veturia lacrimis suis exarmavit, Flor. 1, 22, 3 Duker.; cf.: nautas mirabili forma, Petr. 105, 7: accusationem, Plin. Ep. 3, 9, 29.
No short def.
Headword (normalized):
ex-armo
Headword (normalized/stripped):
ex-armo
Intro Text:
ex-armo, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a., to deprive of arms, to disarm (post-Aug.). Lit.: cohortes, Tac. H. 2, 76 fin.: dextras, Luc. 5, 356: Medos, id. 8, 387; Col. 7, 3, 5; cf. Lampr. Hel. 21.— Transf. Navem, i. e. to unrig, dismantle, Sen. Cons. ad Helv. 17, 6; id. Contr. 3, 15, 9.—Absol., to lose the rigging of a ship: et si exarmavit, tamen reliquias navigii aptat ad cursum, Sen. Ep. 30, 3; cf. Dig. 14, 2, 2.— (Causa pro effectu.) To deprive of strength, to weaken: serpentem diro veneno, i. e. to render harmless, Sil. 1, 411; so, taurum, Val. Fl. 7, 597: tigres, Manil. 4, 235: aequor (terrae cingentes), Claud. Epigr. 35, 4: Romani exarmati, weakened, Vell. 2, 17 Ruhnk.— Trop., to disarm: filium mater Veturia lacrimis suis exarmavit, Flor. 1, 22, 3 Duker.; cf.: nautas mirabili forma, Petr. 105, 7: accusationem, Plin. Ep. 3, 9, 29.
URN:
urn:cite2:scaife-viewer:dictionary-entries.atlas_v1:lat.ls.perseus-eng2-n16602
No citations.
{
"content": "ex-armo, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a., to deprive of arms, to disarm (post-Aug.). Lit.: cohortes, Tac. H. 2, 76 fin.: dextras, Luc. 5, 356: Medos, id. 8, 387; Col. 7, 3, 5; cf. Lampr. Hel. 21.— Transf. Navem, i. e. to unrig, dismantle, Sen. Cons. ad Helv. 17, 6; id. Contr. 3, 15, 9.—Absol., to lose the rigging of a ship: et si exarmavit, tamen reliquias navigii aptat ad cursum, Sen. Ep. 30, 3; cf. Dig. 14, 2, 2.— (Causa pro effectu.) To deprive of strength, to weaken: serpentem diro veneno, i. e. to render harmless, Sil. 1, 411; so, taurum, Val. Fl. 7, 597: tigres, Manil. 4, 235: aequor (terrae cingentes), Claud. Epigr. 35, 4: Romani exarmati, weakened, Vell. 2, 17 Ruhnk.— Trop., to disarm: filium mater Veturia lacrimis suis exarmavit, Flor. 1, 22, 3 Duker.; cf.: nautas mirabili forma, Petr. 105, 7: accusationem, Plin. Ep. 3, 9, 29.\n",
"key": "exarmo",
"type": "main"
}