{
    "meta": {
        "serviceProvider": {
            "name": "Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanties, TELOTA - IT\/DH",
            "link": "https:\/\/www.bbaw.de\/en\/bbaw-digital\/telota"
        },
        "dataProvider": {
            "name": "Classical Language Dictionary",
            "link": "https:\/\/cld.bbaw.de"
        }
    },
    "query": {
        "self": "https:\/\/cld.bbaw.de\/api\/dictionary\/lemma\/saucio?language=lat&options=case-sensitive",
        "searchDate": "2026-05-22 00:56:33",
        "searchFor": "lemma",
        "searchTerm": "saucio",
        "language": "LAT",
        "options": {
            "strict": true,
            "case-sensitive": true,
            "regex": false,
            "simplified": false
        }
    },
    "data": [
        {
            "lemma": "saucio",
            "meanings": 1,
            "language": "lat",
            "descriptions": [
                {
                    "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": "(verb) : saucĭo, āvi, ātum, 1, id.\n* To wound, hurt.\n* Lit. (class. but rare; not in Caes.; syn.: vulnero, laedo): Rubrius in turbā sauciatur,Cic. Verr. 2, 1, 26, § 67; id. Vatin. 5, 13: ut ictu tragulae sauciaretur, Sall. Fragm. ap. Non. 398, 8 (Hist. 2, 19 Dietsch): aliquem virgis,Plaut. Rud. 3, 4, 53: ungue genas,Ov. A. A. 3, 708: radices, Cato ap. Plin. 17, 22, 35, § 198: sive quis sauciatus in opere noxam ceperit,Col. 11, 1, 18.—*\n* In partic., pregn., to kill: meus discipulus valde amat illum, quem Brutus noster sauciavit,has stabbed, mortally wounded,Cic. Att. 14, 22, 1.\n* Trop. (anteand post-class.; rare), to wound, hurt, injure, impair: aculeata sunt, facta et famam sauciant,Plaut. Bacch. 1, 1, 30; cf.: cor odio,id. ib. 2, 2, 35: hoc modo sauciabatur salus hostium nesciorum,Amm. 24, 1, 14; App. M. 8, p. 205, 35.\n* To prune, trim: saucianda ferro est atque exulceranda vitis in eā parte,Col. 4, 24, 17: obliquam vitem plerumque sauciat et interdum praecidit,id. 4, 4, 2.\n* Poet., with se (cf. vulg. Engl., to get shot), to get drunk: haec anus admodum friguttit nimirum sauciavit se flore Liberi, Auct. ap. Fulg. 562, 25; cf. percutio, in the same sense,Plaut. Cas. 3, 5, 20."
                }
            ]
        }
    ]
}