Belcher. — The Middle Voice in Latin. 



Jugulari. Tac, Ann. i. 18. 

 Aut jugulatits poenitentiam accelerabo. With ] which 

 compare — 



Plant., Stich. 423. 

 Ita me auctores fuere, ut egomet me hodie 

 Jugular 6771. 



Jungi. Lnci-., iv. 726. 



Multa modis multis in cimctas undiqua partes 

 Tenuia, quae facile inter se jiinguntur in auris. 

 These fine bodies " easily join themselves together." 



Hoi-., Od. i. 33, 8. 

 Appulis junguntur capreae lupis. 

 She-goats will associate with Apulian wolves. 

 So in the expression dcxtra dextrae jimgitur — " hand 

 clasps hand." 



Ssepe sensu obscaeno, ut ap. Juv., vi. 41. 



Lavari. Lavatus; lautus; lotus; illotus. 

 Form noticed by Madvig, and fully illustrated by Lewis- 

 and Short, s.v. 



-lini. Tac, Ann. ii. 17. 



Ohlitus faciem suo cruore. 



Having smeared his face with his own gore. 



Lustror. Virg., Aen. iii. 279. 

 Lnstramurque Jovi votisque incendimus aras. (Conington 

 marks this verb as " middle.") 



-mitti. Lucr., iv. 681. 



Permissa canum vis. 



The far-reaching power of scent in dogs. 



Cf. Quadriga jiermissa — a coach caused to go at full speed. 



Cf. 688, ijermitti. Senec, De Ira: Animus, si in iram se 

 projecit, non ijermittitur reprimere impetum. Cf. Forcel- 

 lini, s.v. 



|Lucan, vii. 625. 

 Quis cruor emissus perruperit aera venis. 

 [The passage in Lucan is a laboured description of the- 

 horrors of a battle, " the lifeblood gushing out," d-c] 



Lucr., i. 92. 

 Muta metu terram genibus summissa petebat. 

 Speechless with fright, she slipt down on her knees. 

 Cf. Suet., iii. 20 : scque patri ad genua summisit. 

 In prose Lucr. would write genibus summissis (cf. summisso 

 poplite). This sliding of participles from construction to con- 



