LAT

Lewis Short

uxor (noun F) : (for the form VXSOR in inscrr.
* V. the letter X), f.etym. dub.; cf. Sanscr. vaca, wife, a wife, spouse, consort (syn. conjux).
* Lit.: licuit uxorem dotatam ducere,Plaut. Mil. 3, 1, 86: duxit me uxorem liberorum sibi quaesendūm gratia, Enn. ap. Fest. s. v. quaeso, p. 258 (Trag. v. 161 Vahl.); so very freq. ducere uxorem, v. duco: uxorem adjungere,Cic. Fin. 3, 20, 68: ridicule illud L. Nasica censori Catoni, cum ille Ex tui animi sententiā tu uxorem habes? Non hercle, inquit, ex animi mei sententiā,id. de Or. 2, 64, 260: erus, quantum audio, uxore excidit,must go without a wife,Ter. And. 2, 5, 12; 1, 3, 11: quod tu dicis, mea uxor, non te mihi irasci decet,Plaut. Am. 1, 3, 24.—On the legal condition of Roman married women, v. Rein, Röm. Privatr. p. 182 sq.; Dict. of Antiq. s. v. uxor.
* Transf.
* Of animals: olentis uxores mariti,i. e. she-goats,Hor. C. 1, 17, 7.
* Humorously, of the cloak (abolla) as inseparable from the poor man, Mart. 4, 53, 5.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary
memory