View word page
al-lābor (
al-lābor (adl-), lapsus, 3, v. dep., to glide to or toward something, to come to, to fly, fall, flow, slide, and the like; constr. with dat. or acc. (poet.—oftenest in Verg.— or in more elevated prose): viro adlapsa sagitta est, Verg. A. 12, 319: fama adlabitur aurīs, id. ib. 9, 474: Curetum adlabimur oris, we land upon, etc., id. ib. 3, 131; cf. id. ib. 3, 569: mare crescenti adlabitur aestu, rolls up with increasing wave, id. ib. 10, 292: adlapsus genibus, falling down at his knees, Sen. Hippol. 666.—In prose: umor adlapsus extrinsecus, * Cic. Div. 2, 27, 58: angues duo ex occulto adlapsi, Liv. 25, 16.

ShortDef

No short def.

Debugging

Headword:
al-lābor (
Headword (normalized):
al-lābor (
Headword (normalized/stripped):
al-labor (
Intro Text:
al-lābor (adl-), lapsus, 3, v. dep., to glide to or toward something, to come to, to fly, fall, flow, slide, and the like; constr. with dat. or acc. (poet.—oftenest in Verg.— or in more elevated prose): viro adlapsa sagitta est, Verg. A. 12, 319: fama adlabitur aurīs, id. ib. 9, 474: Curetum adlabimur oris, we land upon, etc., id. ib. 3, 131; cf. id. ib. 3, 569: mare crescenti adlabitur aestu, rolls up with increasing wave, id. ib. 10, 292: adlapsus genibus, falling down at his knees, Sen. Hippol. 666.—In prose: umor adlapsus extrinsecus, * Cic. Div. 2, 27, 58: angues duo ex occulto adlapsi, Liv. 25, 16.
IDX:
1900
URN:
urn:cite2:scaife-viewer:dictionary-entries.atlas_v1:lat.ls.perseus-eng2-n1900
Key:
allabor

Senses and Citations (From Data)

Citations (From Models)

No citations.

Data

{
  "content": "al-lābor (adl-), lapsus, 3, v. dep., to glide to or toward something, to come to, to fly, fall, flow, slide, and the like; constr. with dat. or acc. (poet.—oftenest in Verg.— or in more elevated prose): viro adlapsa sagitta est, Verg. A. 12, 319: fama adlabitur aurīs, id. ib. 9, 474: Curetum adlabimur oris, we land upon, etc., id. ib. 3, 131; cf. id. ib. 3, 569: mare crescenti adlabitur aestu, rolls up with increasing wave, id. ib. 10, 292: adlapsus genibus, falling down at his knees, Sen. Hippol. 666.—In prose: umor adlapsus extrinsecus, * Cic. Div. 2, 27, 58: angues duo ex occulto adlapsi, Liv. 25, 16.\n",
  "key": "allabor",
  "type": "main"
}