Scaife ATLAS

Back to dictionaries

Lewis and Short Latin Dictionary

irrĕmĕdĭābĭlis (
irrĕmissē (
irrĕmissĭbĭlis (
irrĕmōtus (
irrĕmūnĕrābĭlis (
irrĕmūnĕrātus (
irrĕpărābĭlis (
irrĕpercussus (
irrĕpertus (
irrĕplētus (
irrēpo (
irrĕposcĭbĭlis (
irrĕprĕhensĭbĭlis (
irrĕprĕhensus (
irreptĭo (
irrepto (
irreptor (
irrĕquĭēbĭlis (
irrĕquĭes (
irrĕquĭētus (
irrĕquīsītus (
View word page
irrēpo (
irrēpo (inr-), repsi, reptum, 3, v. n. 1. in-repo, to creep in, into, upon, or to a place. Lit., with ad: draconem repente irrepsisse ad eam, Suet. Aug. 94.— With dat.: (salamandra) si arbori irrepsit, Plin. 29, 4, 23, § 74.—Absol.: irrepsi tamen, Petr. 87.—With acc. of place: cubiculum, App. M. 3, p. 139; 8, p. 206: caveam, id. ib. 4, p. 149: hospitium, id. ib. 9, p. 219: Mogontiacum, Amm. 27, 10, 1.— Transf., of things: haec lues ... inrepsit in Italiam, Plin. 26, 1, 3, § 3; cf. id. 26, 1, 3, § 9: inrepsisse medicinam, to be gradually introduced, id. 30, 1, 1, § 2: irrepentes radiculae, Col. 4, 1, 2: irrepentibus aquis, id. 3, 18, 5 Schneid. — Trop., to come or get into in an imperceptible manner, to steal in, insinuate one's self: laetitia in sinum, Pompon. ap. Non. 500, 26 (Com. Rel. v. 141 Rib.): eloquentia irrepit in sensus, Cic. Or. 28, 97: in mentes hominum, id. de Or. 3, 53, 203: in tabulas municipiorum, id. Arch. 5, 10: in testamenta locupletium, id. Off. 3, 19, 75.— With acc.: inrepere paulatim militares animos, Tac. A. 4, 2.— With dat.: dolor animo irrepet, Sen. Cons. ad Polyb. 26: irrepsit subito canities seni, Prud. prooem. 23.— Absol.: lentoque irrepunt agmine poenae, Stat. Th. 5, 60: penitus irrepere per luxum, Tac. A. 13, 12; cf. id. H. 2, 63.

ShortDef

No short def.

Debugging

Headword:
irrēpo (
Headword (normalized):
irrēpo (
Headword (normalized/stripped):
irrepo (
IDX:
24965
URN:
urn:cite2:scaife-viewer:dictionary-entries.atlas_v1:lat.ls.perseus-eng2-n24947
Key:
irrepo

Data

{'content': "irrēpo (inr-), repsi, reptum, 3, v. n. 1. in-repo, to creep in, into, upon, or to a place. Lit., with ad: draconem repente irrepsisse ad eam, Suet. Aug. 94.— With dat.: (salamandra) si arbori irrepsit, Plin. 29, 4, 23, § 74.—Absol.: irrepsi tamen, Petr. 87.—With acc. of place: cubiculum, App. M. 3, p. 139; 8, p. 206: caveam, id. ib. 4, p. 149: hospitium, id. ib. 9, p. 219: Mogontiacum, Amm. 27, 10, 1.— Transf., of things: haec lues ... inrepsit in Italiam, Plin. 26, 1, 3, § 3; cf. id. 26, 1, 3, § 9: inrepsisse medicinam, to be gradually introduced, id. 30, 1, 1, § 2: irrepentes radiculae, Col. 4, 1, 2: irrepentibus aquis, id. 3, 18, 5 Schneid. — Trop., to come or get into in an imperceptible manner, to steal in, insinuate one's self: laetitia in sinum, Pompon. ap. Non. 500, 26 (Com. Rel. v. 141 Rib.): eloquentia irrepit in sensus, Cic. Or. 28, 97: in mentes hominum, id. de Or. 3, 53, 203: in tabulas municipiorum, id. Arch. 5, 10: in testamenta locupletium, id. Off. 3, 19, 75.— With acc.: inrepere paulatim militares animos, Tac. A. 4, 2.— With dat.: dolor animo irrepet, Sen. Cons. ad Polyb. 26: irrepsit subito canities seni, Prud. prooem. 23.— Absol.: lentoque irrepunt agmine poenae, Stat. Th. 5, 60: penitus irrepere per luxum, Tac. A. 13, 12; cf. id. H. 2, 63.\n", 'key': 'irrepo', 'type': 'main'}