LAT

Lewis Short

Abdēra | Abdērīta, ae | Abdērītes, ae | Ab-dērītānus, a, um (noun N.f.f.m) : n., and , f., =Ἄβὀηρα.
* Abdera, a town on the southern coast of Thrace, not far from the mouth of the Nestus, noted for the stupidity of its inhabitants. It was the birthplace of the philosophers Protagoras, Democritus, and Anaxarchus; n., Liv. 45, 29, 6; Gell. 5, 3, 3; f., Ov. Ib. 469; Plin. 25, 8, 53, § 94 dub.; 4, 11, 18, § 42: hic Abdera, non tacente me,here was Abdera itself,Cic. Att. 4, 17, 3 (4, 16, 6).
* Folly, stupidity, madness, Cic. l. l. (cf.: id est Ἀβὀηριτικόν, i. e. stupid, id. Att. 7, 7, 4, and Arn. 5, p. 164; Juv. 10, 50; Mart. 10, 25, 4).
* A city of Hispania Baetlca, on the southern coast, now Adra, Mel. 2, 6, 7; Plin. 3, 1, 3, § 8.
* And , , m., =Ἀβὀηριτς, an Abderite: Democritus Abderites, Laber. ap. Gell. 10, 17: Abderites Protagoras,Cic. N. D. 1, 23, 63; cf. id. Brut. 8: de Protagora Abderita,id. de Or. 3, 32, 128: Abderitae legati,Liv. 43, 4, 8; cf. id. § 12 sq.; Vitr. 7, 5, 6; Just. 15, 2 al.
* Adj., of Abdera, meton. for stupid, foolish: Abderitanae pectora plebis habes,Mart. 10, 25, 4.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary

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Thesaurus Linguae Latinae
memory