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            "lemma": "columen",
            "meanings": 1,
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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": "cŏlŭmen | cul-men, mis (noun N.n.n.n) : n., and contr. , , n.root cel- of excello; cf.: celsus, culmus, calamus, collis, lit.\n* That which rises in height, is prominent, projects; hence the point, top, summit, ridge.\n* Form , n. (only this form is used by Plautus, v. Ritschl, prol. ad Plaut. p. 65).\n* An elevated object, a pillar, column: ego vitam agam sub altis Phrygiae columinibus, the lofty buildings, or perh. the mountain-heights, Cat. 63, 71 Ellis ad loc.; and of a pillar of fire: Phoebi fax, tristis nunt a belli, quae magnum ad columen flammato ardore volabat, like an ascending column, Cic. poët. Div. 1, 11, 18.\n* An elevated object that supports, sustains something; in archit., the top of a gable-end, a gable pillar, a prop, Vitr. 4, 2, 1; 4, 7, 5.—Esp. freq.\n* Trop., the top, crown, summit, first, chief, the height, etc.: columen amicorum Antonii, Cotyla Varius,Cic. Phil. 13, 12, 26: pars haec vitae jam pridem pervenit ad columen,Plin. 15, 15, 17, § 57; Col. 3, 4, 3: audaciae,the crown of impudence,Plaut. Am. 1, 1, 211.\n* N. (in Cic. only once; cf. the foll. B.; not in Cat., Lucr., or Hor.; in  gen. first freq. since the Aug. per.). *\n* Any thing high;poet., of the stalk of a bean, Ov. F. 4, 734.\n* The top, summit, e. g. of a building, a roof, gable, cupola, etc.: columen in summo fastigio culminis,Vitr. 4, 2, 1; Ov. M. 1, 295; 1, 289; Verg. E. 1, 69: tecta domorum,id. A. 2, 446; 2, 458; 4, 186: culmina hominum, deorum,i. e. of houses and temples,id. ib. 4, 671; Liv. 27, 4, 11; 42, 3, 7.—Of the dome of heaven, * Cic. Arat. 26. —Of mountain summits: Alpium,Caes. B. G. 3, 2: Tarpeium,Suet. Dom. 23.—Of the crown of the head of men, Liv. 1, 34, 9.—Of the top of the prow of a ship, Luc. 3, 709.\n* Trop., the summit, acme, height, point of culmination (perh. not ante-Aug.): a summo culmine fortunae ad ultimum finem,Liv. 45, 9, 7: principium culmenque (columenque, Sillig) omnium rerum pretii margaritae tenent,Plin. 9, 35, 54, § 106: ruit alta a culmine Troja,Verg. A. 2, 290 (Hom. Il. 13, 772: κατ̓ ἄκρης); cf. id. ib. 2, 603: de summo culmine lapsus,Luc. 8, 8: regale,Claud. VI. Cons. Hon. 64. pastorale, id. B. Get. 355: honoris,App. Flor. 3."
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