Scaife ATLAS

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Lewis and Short Latin Dictionary

săgitta
săgittārĭus
săgittātus
săgittĭfer
Săgittĭger
Săgittĭ-pŏtens
săgitto
săgittŭla
sagma
sagmārĭus
sagmen
săgochlămys
Sagra
săgŭlātus
săgŭlum
săgum
Săguntum
sāgus
săgus
Săïs
Săītae
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sagmen
sagmen, ĭnis, n. root sag, to fill, feed; cf. Gr. σεσαγμένος, σάττω; Lat. sagina, the tuft of sacred herbs plucked within the citadel by the consul or prœtor, by bearing which the persons of the Roman fetiales and ambassadors became inviolable: sunt sagmina quaedam herbae, quas legati populi Romani ferre solebant, ne quis eos violaret, sicuti legati Graecorum ferunt ea, quae vocantur cerycia, Dig. 1, 8, 8; cf. Fest. p. 320 Müll.; and Paul. ex Fest. p. 321 ib.; Plin. 22, 2, 3, § 5; Liv. 1, 24; 30, 43.

ShortDef

No short def.

Debugging

Headword:
sagmen
Headword (normalized):
sagmen
Headword (normalized/stripped):
sagmen
IDX:
42309
URN:
urn:cite2:scaife-viewer:dictionary-entries.atlas_v1:lat.ls.perseus-eng2-n42274
Key:
sagmen

Data

{'content': 'sagmen, ĭnis, n. root sag, to fill, feed; cf. Gr. σεσαγμένος, σάττω; Lat. sagina, the tuft of sacred herbs plucked within the citadel by the consul or prœtor, by bearing which the persons of the Roman fetiales and ambassadors became inviolable: sunt sagmina quaedam herbae, quas legati populi Romani ferre solebant, ne quis eos violaret, sicuti legati Graecorum ferunt ea, quae vocantur cerycia, Dig. 1, 8, 8; cf. Fest. p. 320 Müll.; and Paul. ex Fest. p. 321 ib.; Plin. 22, 2, 3, § 5; Liv. 1, 24; 30, 43.\n', 'key': 'sagmen', 'type': 'main'}