LAT

militaris

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Lewis Short

(adj.adv.) : mīlitāris, e, adj.miles
* Of or belonging to a soldier, to war, or to military service, proper to or usual with soldiers, military, warlike, martial (class.): militares pueri,soldiers' children, officers' sons,Plaut. Truc. 5, 16: homo,id. Ep. 1, 1, 14: advena,id. Ps. 4, 1, 20: tribuni,Cic. Clu. 36, 99: vir,Tac. H. 2, 75: homines,Sall. C. 45, 2.— Also subst.: mīlĭtāris, is, m., a military man, soldier, warrior: cur neque militaris Inter aequales equitat?Hor. C. 1, 8, 5: praesidia militarium,Tac. A. 14, 33.—Of inanim. and abstr. things: panis,Plin. 18, 7, 12, § 67: institutum,Caes. B. C. 3, 75: usus,id. ib. 3, 103: res,id. B. G. 1, 21: disciplina,Liv. 8, 34: labor,Cic. Mur. 5, 11: signa,military ensigns, standards,id. Cat. 2, 6, 13: ornatus,id. Off. 1, 18, 61: leges,id. Fl. 32, 77: animi,Tac. A. 1, 32: sepimentum,Varr. 1, 14, 2: ire militaribus gradibus,to march,Plaut. Ps. 4, 4, 11: aetas, the age for bearing arms (from the seventeenth to the forty-sixth year), Liv. 25, 5: via,a military road, a highway on which an army can march,id. 36, 15: herba, an herb good for wounds, also called millefolium, Plin. 24, 18, 104, § 168.—Also an appellation of Jupiter, App. de Mundo, p. 75.—In comp.: quis justior et militarior Scipione?more militarily strict,Tert. Apol. 11 fin.—Hence, adv.: mīlĭtārĭter, in a soldierly or military manner (rare; not in Cic. or Caes.),Liv. 4, 41; 27, 3; Tac. H. 2, 80; Dig. 49, 16, 4, § 9.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary

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