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            "lemma": "aliunde",
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                    "dictionary": "Lewis Short",
                    "reference": "Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary",
                    "source": "https:\/\/www.perseus.tufts.edu\/hopper\/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0059",
                    "description": "(adverb) : ălĭunde, 2. alius-unde.\n* From another place, person, or thing, from a different place, person, or thing, ἄλλοθεν (most freq. in Cic.): sive aliunde ipsi porro (nomen) traxere,from some other place,Lucr. 3, 133; so id. 5, 522; 6, 1020: eum assumpto aliunde uti bono,Cic. de Or. 2, 10, 39: ascendit aliunde (Gr. ἀλλαχόθεν), Vulg. Joan. 10, 1.\n* Esp.\n* With verbs which are regularly constr with ab or ex, like pendere, mutuari, sumere, stare, etc.: non aliunde pendere,Cic. Fam. 5, 13, 2; id. Or. 24, 80: aliunde mutuati sumus,id. Att. 11, 13: audire aliunde,id. Lig. 1, 1: aliunde dicendi copiam petere,id. de Or. 2, 9, 38; Cat. 61, 149; Plin. 33, 8, 40, § 118: nec aliunde magis sues crassescunt,id. 13, 18, 32, § 110: Radice (thyi) nihil crispius nec aliunde pretiosiora opera,id. 13, 16, 30, § 102: adeo ut totum opus non aliunde constet,of nothing else,id. 30, 1, 2, § 5.\n* Repeated: aliun, de ... aliunde, from one place, etc., .. from another: qui aliunde stet semper, aliunde sentiat,i. e. to be on one side and take part with the other,Liv. 24, 45: Sardonyches e ternis glutinantur gemmis aliunde nigro, aliunde candido, aliunde minio, etc.,Plin. 37, 12, 75, § 197.\n* With the kindred words alius, alio, aliter, etc.: aliis aliunde est periculum,danger threatens one from one source, another from another,Ter. Phorm. 2, 2, 19: qui alii aliunde coibant, Liv 44, 12, 3: aliunde enim alio transfugiunt,from one place to another,Sen. Brev. Vit. 16, 2: aliunde alio commigratio est,id. Cons. ad Helv. 6, 6: aliunde alio transiliens,from one subject to another,id. Ep. 64, 1.\n* With quam: nec fere aliunde (invehitur ad nos) quam ex Hispaniā,from any place except,Plin. 33, 8, 40, § 118: sideri assidue aliunde quam pridie exorienti,id. 2, 97, 99, § 213: cum populatio morum atque luxuria non aliunde major quam e concharum genere proveniat,id. 9, 34, 53, § 104.—With a somewhat changed expression in Cic.: itaque aliunde mihi quaerendum est, ut et esse deos et quales sint di, discere possim, quam quales tu eos esse vis, for quam a te,Cic. N. D. 3, 25, 64."
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