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Lewis and Short Latin Dictionary

mātūrātē
mātūrātĭo
mātūrātor
mātūrē
mātūrĕfăcĭo
mātūresco
mātūrĭtas
mātūro
mātūrus
matus
Mātūta
mātūtīnālis
mātūtīnē and
mātūtīnus
maurella
Maurētānĭa (
Mauri
Mausōlēum
Mausōlus
māvŏlo
Māvors
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Mātūta
Mātūta, ae, f. root ma- of mane, maturus, q. v.. Matuta, the goddess of the morning or dawn, identical with Aurora, Lucr. 5, 656.— A name of Ino (Gr. Λευκοθέα), called by the Romans also Mater Matuta, Cic. Tusc. 1, 12, 28; id. N. D. 3, 19, 48; Ov. F. 6, 479; 6, 545 sq.: Ino, postquam se praecipitavit, Leucothea, materque Matuta (dicta est), Lact. 1, 21; who had a temple at Rome, Liv. 5, 19; 23; 6, 33; 7, 27; 25, 7; and at Satricum, id. 28, 11.

ShortDef

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Debugging

Headword:
Mātūta
Headword (normalized):
mātūta
Headword (normalized/stripped):
matuta
IDX:
28271
URN:
urn:cite2:scaife-viewer:dictionary-entries.atlas_v1:lat.ls.perseus-eng2-n28250
Key:
Matuta

Data

{'content': 'Mātūta, ae, f. root ma- of mane, maturus, q. v.. Matuta, the goddess of the morning or dawn, identical with Aurora, Lucr. 5, 656.— A name of Ino (Gr. Λευκοθέα), called by the Romans also Mater Matuta, Cic. Tusc. 1, 12, 28; id. N. D. 3, 19, 48; Ov. F. 6, 479; 6, 545 sq.: Ino, postquam se praecipitavit, Leucothea, materque Matuta (dicta est), Lact. 1, 21; who had a temple at Rome, Liv. 5, 19; 23; 6, 33; 7, 27; 25, 7; and at Satricum, id. 28, 11.\n', 'key': 'Matuta', 'type': 'main'}