Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. Check out and contribute to the discussion of this word!
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word multus.
Examples
-
Si ex primario cerebri affectu melancholici evaserint, sanguinis detractione non indigent, nisi ob alias causas sanguis mittatur, si multus in vasis, &c. frustra enim fatigatur corpus, &c.
-
Multos home es, Naso neque tecum multus homost qui descendit: Naso, multus es et pathicus
-
Et fuit ei possessio pecudum, et possessio boum, et proventus multus: et inviderunt ei Pelisthim.
Commentary on Genesis - Volume 2 1509-1564 1996
-
When multus and another adjective both limit the same noun et is generally used; as, -- multae et magnae cōgitātiōnēs, _many (and) great thoughts_.
New Latin Grammar Charles E. Bennett
-
Ea fuga Jugurtha impensius modo [393] rebus suis diffidens cum perfugis et parte equitatus in solitudines, dein Thalam pervenit, in oppidum magnum atque opulentum, ubi plerique thesauri filiorumque ejus multus pueritiae cultus [394] erat.
C. Sallusti Crispi De Bello Catilinario Et Jugurthino 86 BC-34? BC Sallust
-
At Marius, ut supra diximus, cupientissima plebe [438] consul factus, postquam ei provinciam Numidiam populus jussit, antea jam infestus nobilitati, tum vero multus [439] atque ferox instare, singulos modo, modo universos laedere; dictitare sese consulatum ex victis illis spolia cepisse; alia praeterea magnifica pro se, et illis dolentia.
C. Sallusti Crispi De Bello Catilinario Et Jugurthino 86 BC-34? BC Sallust
-
Power; what a clever, pleasant man he is; Count d'Orsay joined us; he was riding a most beautiful mare; and then James Macdonald, _cum multus aliis_, and I was quite dead, and almost cross, with cold ....
Records of a Girlhood Fanny Kemble 1851
-
The word comes from rab, multus or magnus, a rabbi, a great man, and one that, as we say, has much in him.
Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume V (Matthew to John) 1721
-
The term Multiple Sclerosis comes from the Latin multus plus plica meaning "fold", and the Greek sklerosis meaning "hardening".
-
The term Multiple Sclerosis comes from the Latin multus plus plica meaning "fold", and the Greek sklerosis meaning "hardening".
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.