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medius is a Latin Adjective that primarily means middle.
Adjective
middle
use partitively, the middle of; media urbs, the middle of the city
English derivatives:
mediterranean medium median mediate mean medieval meridian demimonde immediate intermediary
Adjective
Situated at the center, central; digitus ~us, the middle finger; IANVS ~us, the central shrine of Janus, used as a place of business by bankers.
The central part of, the middle of; (pred.) in the middle of, in half.
Situated between or among, intervening.
(in contexts emphasizing remoteness from the edge, boundary, etc.) The inside of, the middle of, the heart of. (b) (serving to emphasize the completeness of involvement in the situation described); in ~a uia, in ~o foro, i.e. in full view of passers-by; ~um mare (and sim.), the high seas.
Occupying a middle position in time or order, intervening, middle. (b) ~a pars, ~us numerus, a half.
Multae rēs bonae in mediā urbe vīsae sunt.Compare Many good things were seen in the middle of the city.
Moriamur, et in media arma ruamus.Compare Let us die, and let us rush into the middle of the battle.
Lucus ille laetus in medium pascua habeo, ubi omnis genus sacer dea pascor pecus sine ullus pastor.Compare That grove has in its centre fair pastures, where cattle of every sort, sacred to the goddess, were grazing without any keeper.
Hic bos a medius frons unus cornu exsisto, excelsus magisque directus hic, qui ego notus sum, cornu.Compare From the middle of the forehead of this bull one horn rises, longer and straighter than those horns which are known to us.
Is in medius aedes sedens invenio.Compare They find her sitting in the middle of the house.
Oppidanus urbs habeo, victor praemium in medium positus.Compare The townsmen had possession of the city, which was placed in the middle as the prize of the conquerors,
Allen, Joseph H. Allen and Greenough's New Latin Grammar for Schools and Colleges: Founded on Comparative Grammar. Edited by James B. Greenough, George L. Kittredge, Albert A. Howard, and Benjamin L. D'Ooge. Boston, MA: Ginn & Company, 1903.
Crystal, David. A Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics. 6th ed. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing, 2008.
Delatte, Louis, Suzanne Govaerts, Joseph Denooz, and Etienne Evrard. Dictionnaire fréquentiel et index inverse de la langue latine [Frequency Dictionary and Inverse Index of the Latin Language]. Liège, Belgium: Laboratoire d'analyse statistique des langues anciennes de l'Université de Liège (L.A.S.L.A.), 1981.
Diederich, Paul B. The Frequency of Latin Words and Their Endings. PhD diss., Columbia University, 1939.
Francese, Christopher. "Latin Core Vocabulary." Dickinson College Commentaries. Last modified 2014. http://dcc.dickinson.edu/latin-vocabulary-list.
Gildersleeve, Basil L., and Gonzales Lodge. Gildersleeve's Latin Grammar: Third Edition, Revised, and Enlarged. 3rd ed. London, England: Macmillan and Co., 1903.
Glare, Peter G.W. Oxford Latin Dictionary. Vols. 1-8. Oxford, England: Clarendon Press, 1982.
Krüger, Bernd. "Latin Conjugation Tables." Cactus2000. Accessed May 5, 2023. https://latin.cactus2000.de/index.en.php.
Pierson, Nick. "Sound of Text." Accessed October 26, 2019. https://soundoftext.com.
Wheelock, Frederick M. Wheelock's Latin. 6th ed. Revised by Richard A. LaFleur. New York, NY: HarperCollins Publishers, 2005.
Wiktionary Contributors. "Victionarium." Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. Updated March 18, 2019. https://la.wiktionary.org/wiki/Victionarium:Pagina_prima.
Chicago (17th ed.)
Allo Contributors. "medius, media, medium (adj.) - Latin Word Definition." Allo Latin Dictionary. Last modified . Accessed November 24, 2024. http://ancientlanguages.org/latin/dictionary/medius-media-medium.
Entry created on . Last updated on .