Lewis Short
Hermes | Herma, i | Hermae-um (noun M.n) : or , , , = Ἑρμῆς (Hermes, Mercury; hence transf., cf. Liddell and Scott under Ἑρμῆς)
* A Hermes pillar, Hermes, a head carved on the top of a square pedestal or post; such pillars of Hermes stood, esp. in Athens, in several public places and before private houses,Macr. S. 1, 19; Serv. Verg. A. 8. 138; Nep. Alcib. 3; Cic. Leg. 2, 26, 65; id. Att. 1, 8, 2; Juv. 8, 53.
* Deriv.: , , , a temple of Hercules, Hermoeum.
* The name of a summer-house: in diaetam, cui nomen est Hermaeum, recesserat,Suet. Claud. 10.
* A frontier town of Boeotia, over against Euboea, Liv. 35, 50, 9.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary