LAT

concentus

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Lewis Short

concentus (noun M) : concino
* Sounds blending harmoniously together, symphony, harmony, harmonious music (class.).
* Prop.
* In gen.: ille sonus...qui acuta cum gravibus temperans varios aequabiliter concentus efficit,Cic. Rep. 6, 18, 18: concentum servare,id. Fin. 4, 27, 75: vocis lyraeque,Ov. M. 11, 11: avium,Cic. Leg. 1, 7, 21; Verg. G. 1, 422 (quoted in Quint. 5, 9, 16); cf.: et tepidum volucres concentibus aëra mulcent,Ov. F. 1, 155: tubarum ac cornuum,Liv. 9, 41, 17; Quint. 1, 10, 14; cf. signorum,id. 9, 4, 11 (al. congestu, id. 10, 7, 16; v. Spald., Wolf, and Zumpt, dub.): rauci,Stat. Th. 6, 227.
* Trop., concord, agreement, harmony, unanimity (also class.): quā ex conjunctione naturae et quasi concentu atque consensu, quam συμπάθειαν Graeci vocant, etc., Cic. Div. 2, 14, 34; cf. actionum,id. Off. 1, 40, 145; and: omnium doctrinarum,id. de Or. 3, 6, 21: virtutis,Tac. G. 3: omnium laudum,Plin. Pan. 4, 6: nunc age, quid nostrum concentnm dividat audi, * Hor. Ep. 1, 14, 31.—Of the harmony of colors, Plin. 37, 6, 24, § 91; and of the blending of sweet odors, Plin. 12, 19, 42, § 86 (Sillig, conceptum).
* In partic., a concordant acclamation of people in a theatre, Plin. Pan. 2, 6; 46, 2.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary

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