Lewis Short
(adjective) : Gracchus, i, m.
* A Roman family name in the gens Sempronia; the most celebrated are the two brothers Ti. and C. Sempronius Gracchus,sons of Ti. Sempronius and Cornelia, daughter of Scipio Africanus the elder,Cic. Brut. 86, 296; id. Phil. 7, 6, 17: Cornelia, mater Gracchorum,id. Brut. 58, 210; Juv. 6, 168: Gracchi de seditione querentes,id. 2, 24.
* Deriv.
* Gracchā-nus, a, um, , of or belonging to a Gracchus, Gracchan: judices,i. e. the knights who were made judges by a law of C. Gracchus,Cic. Brut. 34, 128: tumultus,Val. Max. 1, 1: mala,Sen. Brev. Vit. 6.
* Grac-chūris, ĭdis, f., a town in Spain founded by Ti. Sempronius Gracchus: Ti. Sempronius Gracchus proconsul Celtiberos victos in deditionem accepit, monumentumque operum suorum Gracchurim oppidum in Hispania constituit,Liv. Ep. 41; cf. Paul. ex Fest. p. 97 Müll.—Hence, Gracchū-rĭtāni, ōrum, m., the inhabitants of Gracchuris, Plin. 3, 3, 4, § 24.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary