No entries found. Showing closest matches:
* sescēnāris, e, adj. [deriv. and signif. unknown]: bovis sescenaris jecur, Liv. 41, 15, 1 (but the conjectural correction to sescennalis or sexennis is improbable) Weissenb. ad loc.
sescēni, v. sescenteni.
sescentēni, also sescēni (less cor. rectly sexc-), ae, a, num. distrib. adj. [sescenti], six hundred each.
sescentēsĭmus (less correctly sexc-) a, um, num. ord. adj. [id.], the six hundredth: anno sescentesimo. Cic. Rep. 1, 37, 58 Mai N. cr.: anno Urbis sescentesimo quinquagesimo quinto, Plin. 8, 7, 7, § 19.
ses-centi (less correctly sex-centi; cf. Ritschl Proleg. ad Plaut. p. 114), ae, a, num. card. adj. [sex-centum].
sescentĭes (less correctly sexc-), num. adv. [sescenti], six hundred times: sescenties HS., six hundred times a hundred thousand, sixty millions of sesterces, Cic. Att. 4, 16 C, 14; so, sestertium sescenties, Plin. Ep. 2, 20, 13: sescenties vicies, Lampr. Commod. 15 (in Plaut. Men. 5, 4, 8, the true read. is sescentos).
Sescentō-plāgus, i, m. [sescentiplaga], a man of six hundred stripes, a name coined by Plautus: nisi cottidiano sesquiopus confeceris, Sescentoplago nomen indetur tibi, Plaut. Capt. 3, 5, 68.
Sescŭlixes, v. Sesquiulixes.
sescuncĭa (SESCONCIA, Inscr. Orell. 4563), ae, f. [sesqui-uncia], one and a half unciae, i.e. a twelfth and a half, = one eighth of a whole, Plin. 36, 25, 62, § 187; Cels. 5, 18, 28; Col. 12, 59, 4; Scrib. Larg. 50; 60; Front. Aquaed. 26; Dig. 37, 8, 7 fin.
As adj.: copulae sescunciae, an inch and a half thick, Plaut. Ep. 5, 1, 11; cf. the foll. art.
sescuncĭālis, e, adj. [sescuncia], containing a twelfth and a half: crassitudo (mensae), of an inch and a half, Plin. 13, 15, 29, § 94.
sescuncĭus, a, um, v. sescuncia fin.
sescŭplex, plĭcis, v. sesquiplex.
sescŭplĭcārĭus, v. sesquiplaris fin.
sescuplus (sesquiplus, in vett. edd. Plin. 2, 22, 20, § 84, where, however, the best MSS. have sescuplus), a, um, adj. [sesqui], taken once and a half, once and a half as much: ut tempora tria ad duo relata sescuplum faciant, Quint. 9, 4, 47; so Plin. 1. 1.: tempus, Ter. Maur. Syll. pp. 2395 and 2412 P.: ratio, Censor. de Die Nat. 1.
sesquĭ-plex, plĭcis, adj. [plico], taken once and a half; once and a half as much: sesquiplex aut duplex aut par, * Cic. Or. 57, 193; also sescuplex (cf. sescuplus), Quint. 9, 4, 47.
Sesquĭ-ŭlixes (Sescŭlixes, Plin. H. N. praef. § 24), as the designation of a thoroughly deceitful man (qs. a Ulysses and a half), name of a satire of Varro (cited very freq. by Nonius), Non. 28, 12; 31, 30; 45, 2; 48, 31 et saep.