Lewis & Short

Parsing inflected forms may not always work as expected. If the following does not give the correct word, try Latin Words or Perseus.

The word edomare could not be parsed. Trying a normal dictionary lookup:

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Edom, indecl. m.

  1. I. Esau, elder son of the patriarch Isaac: Esau, ipse est Edom, Vulg. Gen. 36, 1 al.; Isid. Orig. 7, 6, 33.
  2. II. A nation descended from Esau, Vulg. Num. 20, 14; id. 4 Reg. 3, 26 et saep.
  3. III. Transf., the country of the Edomites, Vulg. Num. 21, 4 et saep.

Ē-dŏmĭno, āvi, 1, v. a., to control absolutely; pass., Arn. 5, no. 11 init.

* ē-dŏmĭto, āre, v. freq. a., to tame completely, thoroughly, Ven. Carm. 9, 1, 143.

ē-dŏmo, ŭi, ĭtum, 1, v. a., to tame completely, conquer, overcome, vanquish, subdue (rare; mostly poet. and in postAug. prose).

  1. I. Prop.: (Roma) edomito sustulit orbe caput, Ov. F. 4, 256; cf. id. A. A. 3, 114.
  2. II. Transf.: pastinaca edomita, opp. agrestis, Col. 9, 4, 5: aes igni, to melt, Plin. 33, 3, 20, § 65: ramum oleae curvando, id. 17, 19, 30, § 137: vitiosam naturam ab eo sic edomitam et compressam esse doctrina, ut, etc., * Cic. Fat. 5, 10 (al. domitam): feritatem, Col. 11, 3, 37; Lact. 4, 25, 8: nefas, * Hor. C. 4, 5, 22: labores, Sil. 3, 531: lumina, to lull to sleep, id. 10, 343.