Venio
From TTT @ frath.net
Latin-English
vĕn|ĭō, -īre, vēnī, ventum. (ˈve.ni.o) v. intrans.
- To come.
Loci
- αʹ Cicero, Ad Atticum 10.1:
| iii Nonas cum in Laterium fratris venissem, accepi litteras et paulum respiravi, quod post has ruinas mihi non acciderat. | When I had gotten to my brother's in Laterium on the third of April, I got your letter and got to breathe freely for a bit, something that hadn't happened to me since my ruination. |
- βʹ Ovid, Fasti 3.603-608:
| Lītŏrĕ | dōtā|lī sō|lō cŏmĭ|tātŭs Ă|chātē sēcrē|tūm nū|dō || dūm pĕdĕ | cārpĭt ĭ|tēr, āspĭcĭt | ērrān|tēm, nēc | crēdĕrĕ | sūstĭnĕt | Ānnām ēssĕ: quĭd | īn Lătĭ|ōs || īllă vĕn|īrĕt ă|grōs? dūm sē|c(um) Āenē|ās, "Ān|n(a) ēst!" ēx|clāmăt Ă|chātēs. |
Walking a secluded path on the beach his wife had endowed him, with only Achates for company, he catches sight of Anna wandering, and can't bring himself to believe it is her. While Aeneas is thinking to himself, "Why would she have come to the fields of Latium?" Achates cries out, "It's Anna!" |