Peregre
From TTT @ frath.net
Latin-English
pĕrĕgrē. (ˈpe.re.ɡre) adv.
- Abroad; from abroad; to or from home.
[pereger.]
| Cic. | 100% | Class. | 60% | Rom. | 0% | Med. | 0% | Neo. | 0% | ||||||||||
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Constructions
none yet collected
Loci
Cicero
- αʹ Cicero, Philippica 5.30:
| Lucius quidem frater eius, utpote qui peregre depugnarit, familiam ducit. | His brother Lucius, as the one who has fought abroad, commands his household. |
- βʹ Cicero, Tusculanae Disputationes 3.30 (quoting Terence):
| Pericla, damna peregre rediens semper secum cogitet, Aut fili peccatum aut uxoris mortem aut morbum filiae, Communia esse haec, ne quid horum umquam accidat animo novum; |
Coming home from abroad, let him always expect dangers, losses; either his son's failure, or his wife's death, or the sickness of his daughter—these things are common—lest any of them should ever take him by surprise. |
Classical
- γʹ Horace, Epistulae 1.12:
| ————— ————— Dēmŏcrĭ|tī pĕcŭs | ēdĭt ă|gēllōs cūltăquĕ, | dūm pĕrĕ|gr(e) ēst ănĭ|mūs sĭnĕ | cōrpŏrĕ | vēlōx. |
Democritus' cattle have eaten his fields and gardens, while his swift mind has gone abroad without his body. |
- δʹ Horace, Sermones 1.6:
| nām mĭhĭ | cōntĭnŭ|ō māj|ōr quāe|rēndă fŏ|rēt rēs ātquĕ să|lūtān|dī plū|rēs, dū|cēndŭs ĕt | ūnūs ēt cŏmĕs | āltĕr, ŭ|tī nē | sōlūs | rūsvĕ pĕ|rēgrēve ēxī|rēm —— |
because right off there'd be greater wealth for me to look for, and more people to greet, and one companion and another to bring along, so that I couldn't go out alone, in the country or abroad |
- εʹ Livy, Ab Urbe Condita 2.6:
| alios peregre in regnum Romam accitos | others had been brought to Rome from abroad to rule |