LAT

indolesco

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Lewis Short

(verb) : in-dŏlesco, lŭi, 3, and
* A. [in-dolor], to feel pain, to smart, ache (mostly postAug.).
* Lit.: locus tactu indolescit,Cels. 8, 9: oculi indolescunt,Plin. 31, 3, 27, § 45.
* With acc., to feel pain at: tactum hominum,Just. 12, 13, 9.
* Trop., to feel pain or grief, to be grieved, troubled at any thing.—Constr. with acc. and inf., quod, or absol.; poet. also with abl. and acc.
* With inf.: quis (fuit), qui non indoluerit, tam sero se ... cognoscere?Cic. Phil. 2, 25: aequari adulescentes senectae suae,Tac. A. 4, 17: successurumque Minervae indoluit,Ov. M. 2, 789; 9, 261 al.
* With abl.: facto,Ov. M. 4, 173: malis,id. Tr. 2, 570.
* With acc.: id ipsum indoluit Juno, Ov. M. 2, 469.
* Absol.: indolui,Ov. Tr. 5, 11, 3.—In part. fut. pass.: maeroris retia amicis et externis indolescenda,Sid. Ep. 2, 12; Minuc. Fel. Octav. 5.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary

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