Lewis & Short

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ăpŏthēca, ae, f., = ἀποθήκη [corrupted in Ital. to bottega, in Fr. to boutique, and in Germ. to Bude = booth, shop], a place where things are put away, laid up, a repository, storehouse, magazine, warehouse, etc., Cic. Phil. 2, 27, so id. Vatin. 5; Dig. 33, 7, 12; esp. for wine, a store-room (not wine-cellar, since the ancients kept their wine in the upper part of the house), * Hor. S. 2, 5, 7; Plin. 14, 14, 16, § 49; 14, 4, 6, § 57; Dig. 47, 2, 21, Arn. 7, p. 236; also for oil: apothecae olei, Vulg. 1 Par. 27, 28; for corn: apothecae frumenti, ib. 2 Par. 32, 28; ib. Joel, 1, 17; for armor, equipments: omnes apothecas supellectilis suae, ib. Isa. 39, 2.

ăpŏthēcārĭus, ii, m. [apotheca], a warehouseman, a clerk, Dig. 12, 58, 12, § 3.

* ăpŏthēco, āre, v. a. [apotheca], to lay up in a storehouse, Ven. Ep. praef. Carm. 6, 1, 5.

ăpŏthĕōsis, is, f., = ἀποθέωσις, a deification, Tert. Apol. 34: Apotheosis Christi, title of a poem of Prudentius; v. Teuffel, Rom. Lit. § 430, 4.

ăpŏthĕsis, is, i. q. apophygis, q. v., Vitr. 4, 1.