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Lewis and Short Latin Dictionary

ad-jăcŭlātus
adjectīcĭus or
adjectĭo
adjectīvus
adjecto
adjectus
adjectus
ad-jĭcĭo (better
ad-jŭbĕo
adjūdĭcātĭo
ad-jūdĭco
adjuero = adjuvero
ad-jŭgo
adjūmentum
adjunctĭo
adjunctīvus
adjunctor
ad-jungo
adjūrāmentum
adjūrātĭo
adjūrātor
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ad-jūdĭco
ad-jūdĭco, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a., to grant or award a thing to one, as judge, to adjudge (opp. abjudico).—With acc. and dat. Lit.: me est aequum frui fraternis armis mihique adjudicarier, Poët. ap. Auct. Her. 2, 26, 42: regnum Ptolemaeo, Cic. Agr. 2, 17; 2, 43: mulierem Veneri in servitutem, id. Div. in Caecil. 17, 56: Bruto legiones, id. Phil. 10, 6; so id. Off. 1, 10; Liv. 3, 72; Val. Max. 7, 3; Suet. Aug. 32 al.: nemo dubitabat, quin domus nobis esset adjudicata, Cic. Att. 42; so Caes. B. G. 7, 37; cf. Sen. Hipp. 109.—And poet. of Augustus: si quid abest (i. e. dicioni Romanorum nondum subjectum) Italis adjudicat armis, i. e. like a judge, he subjects the nations to the Roman sway, merely by his arbitrary sentence, Hor. Ep. 1, 18, 57: causam alicui, to decide in one's favor, Cic. de Or. 2, 29, 129.— In gen., to assign or ascribe a thing to one: Pompeius saepe hujus mihi salutem imperii adjudicavit, has ascribed to me, Cic. Att. 1, 19: optimum saporem ostreis Lucrinis adjudicavit, conceded, Plin. 9, 54, 79, § 168.!*? For adjudicato in Plaut. Men. 1, 3, 6, Ritschl reads tu judicato.

ShortDef

No short def.

Debugging

Headword:
ad-jūdĭco
Headword (normalized):
ad-jūdĭco
Headword (normalized/stripped):
ad-judico
IDX:
840
URN:
urn:cite2:scaife-viewer:dictionary-entries.atlas_v1:lat.ls.perseus-eng2-n840
Key:
adjudico

Data

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