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† hyperbăton, i, n., = ὑπέρβατον, a rhet. fig., transposition of words (pure Lat. transgressio), Quint. 9, 3, 91; cf. id. 8, 6, 62 sq.; 9, 1, 6 al.
† hyperbŏlaeus, a, um, adj., = ὑπερβόλαιος, extreme: soni, Vitr. 5, 4, 7 sq.
† hyperbŏlē, ēs, f., = ὑπερβολή, a rhet. fig., exaggeration, hyperbole (pure Lat. superlatio and superjectio), Quint. 8, 6, 67 sq.; 8, 4, 29; Sen. Ben. 7, 23 (in Cic. Top. 10, 45, and Fam. 7, 32, 2, written as Greek).
hyperbŏlĭcē, adv., v. hyperbolicus fin.
† hyperbŏlĭcus, a, um, adj., = ὑπερβολικός, excessive, overstrained, hyperbolical: instrumenta, Sid. Ep. 7, 2 med. (Cujac. reads hypobola = ὑπόβολα, pledged).
Adv.. hyperbŏlĭcē, hyperbolically: dictum, Hier. ap. Jes. 2, 6, 25; id. ap. Galat. 4, 15; 16.
Hyperbŏlus, i, m., an Athenian orator, Cic. Brut. 62, 224; id. Rep. 4, 10; Quint. 1, 10, 18 al.
Hyperbŏrĕi, ōrum, m., = Ὑπερβόρεοι (-ειοι),
† hypercătălectus or hypercă-tălectĭcus, versus = ὑπερκατάληκτος or ὑπερκαταληκτικός, in prosody, a verse that has at the end a syllable or a foot too much, hypercatalectic, Serv. p. 1817 P.; Prisc. p. 1216 ib.
Hypĕrīa or -ēa, ae, f., a fountain at Pherœ, in Thessaly, Plin. 4, 8, 15, § 29; Val. Fl. 4, 375.
† hypĕrīcon (-īcum), i, n., = ὑπέρεικον, a plant, called also chamaepitys and corion, ground-pine, Plin. 26, 8, 53, § 85.
Hypĕrīdes, is, m., = Ὑπερίδης, a celebrated orator in Athens, Quint. 10, 1, 77; Cic. de Or. 1, 13, 58; 3, 7, 28; id. Or. 26, 90; 31, 110; id. Ac. 1, 3, 10 al.
Hypĕrīon, ŏnis, m., = Ὑπερίων.
Hypermnestra, ae, and Hy-permnestrē, ēs (and mutilated Hy-permestra, Hyg. Fab. 168; Serv. ad Verg. A. 10, 497; Prop. 5, 7, 63 Müll.; like Clytemestra for Clytaemnestra), f., = Ὑπερμνήστρη, the youngest of the daughters of Danăus, the only one who preserved her husband’s life, Ov. H. 14, 1 sq.; Prop. 4 (5), 7, 63.
† hypĕrŏcha, ae, f., = ὑπεροχή, excess, superabundance, Dig. 20, 4, 20.
† hyperthyrum, i, n., = ὑπέρθυρον, the lintel of a door-way, Vitr. 4, 6 dub. (al. hypothyrum).