Synopsis A Copious and Critical English-Latin Lexicon, Founded on the German-Latin Dictionary of C. E. Georges, by J. E. Riddle and T. K. Arnold by : Joseph Esmond Riddle
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1847 edition. Excerpt: ...are in a bad state, comminutus est qs re famlljari. Of a state or prince, vectigalia (revenue of the state).--aerarium (the treasury).--flscus (private treasury of a prince, in time of Bmpp.). To regulate the /., vectigalia or rem publlcam ordinare aft. H. Od. 2, 1, 10): things pertaining to the f.'s, financial matters, "res ad vectigalia (or ad serarium) pertinentes; also respublica (aft. the Greek woXtrtia, according to Morgenstern, in Seebodefs Archiv. 1829, No. 17, p. 68; e. g, modica respublica novis sumptibus atterebetur, PHn. Ep. 9, 33, 10): the science of f, doctrina rerum ad vectigalia pertinent i urn: the administration of the f.'s, cura lerarii (Suet. Oct, 36): minister of f., i. e. our 'first lord of the treasury, ' cui cure asraril tradlta est (aft. Suet. Oct. 36). FINANCIAL, nd vectigalia or ad ovarium pertinens: the f. department, cure asraril. FINANCIER. Swfiwanci. FINCH, fringUlatZine.). FIND, To discover, Src, invenire (r. pr. of one who arrives at the knowledge of what has hitherto been unknown to him, esplg if the thing is found unintentionally and without effort, tbpianet: but obs. Invenire, as the generic term, is used in alt the meanings of our 'to find;' e.g. scuto relato Inventa sunt In eo foramina exx. Cas, where, of course, the effort of counting the Holes was made; so in constructions like 'but few men are found who' d-c.).--reperire (to f. after long seeking, with the accessory notion of the relatively deep concealment of what is found, aweuoieitstv).--offendere (tu light upon athg, to meet accidentally, come, as it were, into contact with an event, $c, with accessory notion of surprise, either on the part of the subject that finds, or on the pari of the object found, ...