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‡ frātrāre (al. ‡ frātriāre) puerorum mammae dicuntur, cum primum tumescunt, quod velut fratres pares oriuntur: quod etiam in frumento spica facere dicuntur, Paul. ex Fest. p. 91 Müll.; cf.: ‡ fratrarent, turgerent, pubescerent, Placid. p. 463 (cf. fraterculo).
‡ 1. frātria, uxor fratris (sister-inlaw), Paul. ex Fest. p. 90 Müll.; cf.: fratriae appellantur fratrum inter se uxores, Non. 557, 9; and: fratria, εἰνάτηρ, Gloss. Philox; also called ‡ fratrissa, acc. to Isid. Orig. 9, 7, 17.
‡ 2. fratria est Graecum vocabulum partis hominum, ut Neapoli etiam nunc, Varr. L. L. 5, § 85 Müll. (= φρατρία, a division of the people, answering to the Lat. curia, the third part of a φυλή).
frātrĭcīda, ae, m. [frater-caedo], one who murders a brother, a fratricide, Nep. Timol. 1; Cic. pro Domo, 10, 26.
frātrĭcīdĭum, ii, n. [fratricida], the murder of a brother. fratricide (eccl. Lat.), Tert. Monog. 4; Hier. adv. Jovin. 1, 14; Salv. de Gub. Dei, 1, p. 25.
‡ frātrissa, ae, v. 1. ‡ fratria.
frātrŭēlis, is, m. [frater, analog. with patruelis], a father’s brother’s son, a cousin (late Lat.), Hier. Ep. 22, 26; cf.: fratrueles filii materterae sunt, Isid. Orig. 9, 6, 15.