Lewis Short
(adj.adv.) : Ārăbĭa (on account of the long A in Prop. 3, 10, 16, erroneously written by many Arrabia; cf. Jahn ad Hor. C. 3, 4, 9), ae, f., = Ἀραβία.
* In an extended sense, the country Arabia, divided by the ancients into Petroea (from its principal city, Petra), Deserta, and Felix, Plin. 5, 11, 12, § 65; Mel. 1, 10; Vulg. 3 Reg. 10, 15; ib. Gal. 4, 25 al.
* In a more restricted sense, a town in Arabia Felix, Mel. 3, 8, 7. —Hence, Ārăbĭcus, a, um, adj., Arabic, Arabian: odor (i. e. tus),Plaut. Mil. 2, 5, 2: sinus,Plin. 2, 67, 67, § 168; Mel. 3, 8, 1: resina,Plin. 14, 20, 25, § 122: adamas,id. 37, 4, 15, § 56: alites,id. 37, 10, 54, § 146: balanus,id. 12, 21, 46, § 102: lapicidinae, i. e. of alabaster,id. 36, 12, 17, § 78: spina,the acacia,id. 24, 12, 65, § 107: vectis,Curt. 7, 2. 17. —Absol.: Ārăbĭca, ae, f. (sc. gemma), a precious stone, similar to ivory, perh. a kind of chalcedony or onyx, Plin. 37, 10, 54, § 145; Isid. Orig. 16, 14.—Ārăbĭcē, adv.: facite olant aedes Arabice, make the apartments redolent with the perfumes of Araby (frankincense, which was brought from Arabia), Plaut. ap. Diom. p. 378 P. (Arabice olet, id est ex odoribus Arabicis, Fest. p. 23): Arabice sacri vocantur, in Arabic, Sol. c. 33.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary