LAT

consummatio

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Lewis Short

consummātĭo (noun F) : id. (postAug.).
* A casting up or reckoning together, a summing up, a summary view.
* Prop.: operarum,Col. 12, 13, 7: ambitus Europae,Plin. 4, 23, 37, § 121: singulorum mancipiorum,Dig. 21, 1, 36.
* Afinishing, completing, accomplishing, consummation: susceptae professionis,Col. 9, 2, 2: habet res minime consummationem,id. 1, prooem. § 7: maximarum rerum,Sen. Brev. Vit. 1, 3: operis,Quint. 2, 18, 2; 6, 1, 55: liberalitatis,Plin. Ep. 5, 12, 1; Vulg. Jer. 30, 11 (for the Heb. ) et saep.: alvi,i. e. a digestion of food,Plin. 26, 8, 28, § 43: gladiatorum,i. e. the main proof of their skill,id. 8, 7, 7, § 22: PRIMI PILI, i. e. the completed time of service as primipilus, Inscr. Orell. 3453.
* A union, accumulation: ita non haec (poma) sed consummatio omnium nocet,not fruit of itself, but the use of it in addition to all other food,Cels. 1, 3, 83.
* In rhet. t. t., a comprehending, connecting together: cum plura argumenta ad unum effectum deducuntur,Quint. 9, 2, 103.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary

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