ON 
ONE 
OPE 
( poet. .).— Like an old woman, aniliter. — 
Avery old woman, admodum anus.— 
Old age, senectus (senecta is poet.), seni¬ 
lis ffitas, senium ; anas extrema. — Yow 
in my old age, nunc exacta or confetti 
state. — He is worn away with old ao-e, 
senio confectus est. — Old age is sickly 
enough of itself, senectus ipsa est mor¬ 
bus. — Of old age, senilis. — An old 
carle, silicernium. capularis senex. — 
An old knave, velerator. — An old sol¬ 
dier, miles emeritus or veteranus. — 
Somewhat old, grandior, senior. — Very 
old, senio confectus, annis obsitus. — 
To grow old, senesco. — Grown old, 
ajtate proveclus, senex factus. — Older 
and wiser, discipulus prioris est poste¬ 
rior dies. — You are too old to marry, 
prieteriit tua ad ducendum tetas_ 
MOld, Old-fashioned, obsoletus, exoietus; 
desuetus. 
Oldish, letate grandior. 
Oldness, antiquitas, vetustas. — of age, 
senectus. 
OLEANDER, nerium. 
.OLEAGINOUS, oleaginus. 
OLFACTORY, olfactii praditus. 
OLIGARCHY, paiicorum potentia or po- 
testas : respublica, quae paucorum po- 
testate regitur. 
OLITORY garden, hortus olitorius. 
OLIVE, oliva ; olea; oleae bacca. — stone, 
sainpsa. — tree, olea ; oliva. — A wild 
olive-tree, oleaster. —A little wild olive- 
tree, oleastelius. — Of olive, olivarius, 
oleaginus. — Oil of olives, olivum ; — 
unripe, omphacium. — Olive-colored, 
oleaginus, colore oleagino. — An olive 
garden, olivetum. — Bearing olives, oli- 
vifer. — The olive-harvest, oleitas; oli- 
vitas. 
OLYMPIAD, Olympias. — The computa¬ 
tion of time by Olympiads, Olympiadum 
ratio. 
OMELET of eggs, ovorum intrita in sar- 
tagine cocta or frixa. 
OMEN, omen. — To seek or gather from 
omens, auspicor. — To do a thing on the 
encouragement of omens, addicentibus 
avibus aliquid facere. — A good omen, 
omen bonum, faustum, felix, fortuna- 
tum. — A bad omen, omen malum, in- 
^ faustum, infelix, funestum. 
To Ominate, priesagio, ominor. 
Ominous, ominosus, portentosus. 
Ominously, ominose, Quint. 
Ominousness, rei ominosie qualitas. 
OMIT, omitto (entirely), intermitto (for a 
time) ; praetermitto, mitto ; negligo. 
Omitting, Omission, omissio; praiter- 
missio. —for a time, intermissio. 
OMNIFARIOUS, omnigenus. 
OMNIPOTENT, rerum omnium priepo- 
tens; omnipotens (poet.). 
Omnipotence, omnipotentia, Macrob. 
OMNIPRESENT, qui omnibus locis 
adest. 
OMNISCIENT, qui omnia scit; rerum 
cunctaruin sciens ; omnituens (poet.). 
ON, prep., is answered by several Latin pre¬ 
positions, viz. by a, ab ; as, A country on 
the right hand, inaccessible by reason of 
rocks, regio a dextrl scopulis inaccessa. 
— It is on the right hand, est a dextrl. 
-II By ad ; as, on this hand there is a 
chapel, est ad fianc manuin sacellum. 
— IV/cat is on the right hand, and what, is 
on the left, quod ad dextram, quod ad si- 
nistram.-II By cum ; as, if it were 
not so, you would be hardly on his side, ni 
hiec ita essent, cum illo baud stares. 
-V By de, e, ex; as, he depends on 
you, de te pendet. — On what ground ? 
quil de causl ? — On a sudden, de or ex I 
lmproviso; derepente. — On. both sides, 
ex utrique parte. — He fought on horse¬ 
back, ex equo pugnavit.-II By in ; as, 
he ought to be well known, on whom a 
benefit is conferred, mores ejus spectandi 
erunt, in quern berveficium confertur.— 
Having spent abundance of money on that 
work, consumptA in id opus ingenti pe- 
cuniil. — Lay not the blame on me, ne 
conferas culpam in me. — He hud a 
rL "g on his finger, in digito habuit annu-l 
turn. — 7’/ig soldiers fell on their knees,' 
procubuerunt in genua milites. — A bird 
lighted on the next tower, avis in proximo 
lurre consedit.-IT By secundum ; 
“s, lgive judgment on your side, secun- 
® llm te judico.-- II By sub ; as, on 
that condition, sub e& conditione. — On 
pain of perpetual slavery, sub puma per- 
petuie servitutis. - IT By super; as, 
the Romans leaped on the very targets, 
super ipsa Romani scuta salierunt. - 
II But Vie prep, is sometimes under¬ 
stood, as in several of the following exam¬ 
ples. — She kept her eyes fixed on the 
ground, solo fixos oculos tenebat. — On 
these terms you may have her, istis legi- 
bus habeas licet .—He is said to have 
played excellently on the lyre, fidibus pras- 
clare cecinisse ijicitur.— They are oblig¬ 
ed to live on honey alone, melle solo co- 
guntur vivere. — One may live very well 
on a little, vivitur parvo bene_ On the 
first opportunity, primo quoque tempore. 
— Came you on foot or on horseback ? 
venisti pedibus, an equo? — On my 
honest word, bonii fide. — On the ground, 
humi. — To creep on the ground, per hu- 
tnum repere. — On either side, utrobique. 
— On neither side, neutro. — On this 
side, hinc.— On that side, illinc. — On 
this side, and on that side, hinc atque il¬ 
linc. — O/i both sides, utrinque, utro¬ 
bique. — On all sides ag on every side, 
uridique, ex omni parte. — On this side 
or on this side of, cis, citra. — On the 
other side or farther side of, trans, ultra. 
— There is nothing on the other side of 
that mountain, nihil est ultra ilium 
motitem. — On foot, pedes. — On horse¬ 
back, eques. — On a sudden, im proviso, 
repente. — To call on, invoco. 
ON, ado. (forward), prorsum, prorsus : 
(further), porro. •— To come or go on, 
pergo, procedo, progredior. — On.' eja! 
age ! progredere ! — Go on before, i praj. 
— -find so on, et sic porro; et cetera. 
ONCE, seme!. — He had never seen her but 
once, semel omtiino earn viderat. — 
More than once, plus vice simplici. — 
Once for all, semel in perpetuuin. — At 
once. (See At.) — I could not be here 
and there at once, ego lilc esse et illlc 
simul hand potui. — I could not tell you 
all at once, non poteram uno tempore 
omnia narrare. — One cannot do two 
things at once, simul sorbere et flare 
haud facile factu est. — To do two things 
at once, de eadem fidelil duos parietes 
dealbare.-If Once or once on a time, 
olim, quondam. — If that would but once 
come to pass, quod si esset aliquando fu- 
turum. 
ONE, units. — One or two may despise 
these, unus et alter hicc spernant.— 
This is all one with that, hoc unum et 
idem est atque illud. — All under one, 
una or eadem opera. — There is hardly 
one in ten, vix decimus quisque est. — 
There was not so much as one, neque 
quisquam omnium fuit. — At one o’clock, 
l<o!'a princi .—It is all one to me, mea 
nihil refert.— They differ one from an¬ 
other, inter se dissident. —As being one 
that understood, quippequi intellexisset. 
— To live according to one’s own nature, 
secundum naturain suain vivere. — One 
good turn deserves another, manus ma¬ 
nual fricat.— One thief accuses another, 
Clodius accusat mcechos. — One swal¬ 
low does not make a summer, una hirun- 
do non facit ver.— One man’s meat is 
another man’s poison, non ornnes eadem 
rnirantur aniantque. — One is as good as 
none, unus vir, nullus vir. — Where they 
could pass only one at a lime, qua singuli 
transirent, Liv .— To make one among 
the rest, in numero esse, in numerum 
procedere. — The last but one, provimus 
a postremo. — One another, alius alium ; 
mutuo. — They loved one another, alii 
alios diligebant.— They assist one an¬ 
other, tradunt operas mutuas. — They 
like one another well, uterque utrique est 
cordi. — One after another, invicem ; ai- 
ternus; alii ex aliis.— They think on 
one thing after another, aliam rein ex alii 
cogitant. — One with another, promiscue, 
temere; prout contigerit; aliud cum 
alio, nullo delectu. — One or the other, 
alteruter. — One thing, unum. — But for 
the want of one thing, ni unum desit. — 
Any one, aliquis. — If any one, if one, si 
quis ; ( and as a general rule quis is to be 
used instead o/aliquis after all direct and 
indirect questions, or in dependent and sub¬ 
ordinate sentences, in which by any one or 
one is meant somethin rt merely possible. 
179 
supposed or imagined, and not any thing 
actual). — Every one, singuli; quisque” 
omnes. — Give to every one according to 
his desert, cuique pro dignitate tribua- 
tur- Every one hus more than business 
enough of his own to employ his mind, satis 
superque est sibi suarum cuique rerum 
cura.—’7'fs all one, perinde est_ As one 
would have it, ex sententii or voto .—Such 
a one, talis. — Had I not thought him to be 
such a one, ni ita eunt existimissem. — 
One by one, singulatim, singillatim. — 
So that they cannot come one by one, ita lit 
ne singuli quidem possunt accedere. — 
On the one side, hinc, ex hie parte. — On 
the one and on the other side, ex utrique 
parte.— Onewhile, rnodo, nunc.— One- 
eyed. See Blind and Eye. 
ONION, caspa, ciepe. — A young onion or 
scallion, caepula. — The wild onion, ciepe 
campestre. — The sea onion, ciepe raari- 
num ; scilla or squilla- An onion-bid, 
cepina. 
ONLY, adj. unicus, solus: adv. solum, 
tantum, duntaxat, modo. (See also 
But, especially in the sense of only.) — 
Only-begotten, unigena, unicus fiiius.— 
In word only, verbo, verbo tenus. 
ONSET, impetus ; impressio. — To make 
an onset, impetum or impressionem fa 
cere.-|| See Assault. 
ONWARDS, porro, prorsum, deinceps. 
on T x- — Of an onyx, onychinus. 
OOZE, OOZY ground, locus paluster or 
paludosus; solum uliginosum. 
OPAL, opalus. 
OPEN, adj. (not shut), apertus, patulus, 
patens. — My house is open to all gentle¬ 
men, honestis omnibus patet domu3 mea. 
— Half-open, semiapertus. — Wide open, 
patulus, omnibus patens. — Open on 
both sides, bipatens (poet.). — In the open 
street, in aperto ac propatulo loco ; in 
publico. — To lay open an impnsthume or 
wound, abscessum or vulnus aperire. — 
Laid open, (as a wound), apertus, diduc- 
tus. — To set open a door, januam, osti¬ 
um or fores aperire. — To be or lie open 
(as a. door, Sec.), pateo, patesco, patefio. 
— To keep open house, hospitio quosvis 
excipere. — Open-eyed, vigil, vigilans. 
— handed, 1 iberalis, munificus. — heart¬ 
ed, simplex, sincerus, candidus, in- 
genuus. -— Open-heartedness (liberality), 
largitio, liberalitas; munificentia. — 
Open-mouthed, os apertum habens. — 
Open (exposed to public view), ante ocu¬ 
los or in conspectu omnium positus. — 
to the sun, soli expositus. — to danger 
or wounds, periculo or vulneribus oh- 
noxius. — To be or lie open to danger, 
periculo obnoxium esse, in periculo ver- 
sari. —Laid open (exposed to), obnoxius, 
opportunus.-TI Open (clear or evi¬ 
dent), clarus, apertus, evidens, manifes- 
tus, perspicuus : (candid, sincere), sim¬ 
plex, candidus, ingenuus: (public or 
common), publicus, communis: (publicly 
known), omnibus notus, pervulgatus: 
(not fortified), non munitus: (vacant), 
vacuus. — Laid open (disclosed or di- 
vulged), patefactus,vulgatus,evulgatus. 
— lie laid the treachery open, insidias de- 
texit. —■ He laid himself entirely open to 
me, mi hi se totum patefecit. — He laid 
open his villany, apertum ejus seel us po- 
suit. 
To Open, Ope, aperio; patefacio; rese- 
ro ; rec'.udo ; pando, expando; evolvo, 
revolvo, (e. g. a writing) ; inseco, incl- 
do, (cut open): — v. n. se aperire, ape- 
rior; patefio, pandor, se pandere; re- 
cludor ; fiorem aperire: discedo (e. g. 
of the slcy, the earth); dehisco (to chink 
or chap, of the earth) - To open, what 
was sealed, to unseal, resigno. — what 
was pitched, relinp. — a letter, epistolary 
aperire; literas resignare (unseal) , 
epistolam solvere (untie, loose). — a vein 
(of the body), venam secare or incidert 
•— a dead body, corpus mortui aperire_ 
To open the hand, digitos porrigere_ 
To open or lay open at the root, ablaqueo. 
— To open the pores of the body, poros 
recludere. —— If (disclose), detego, re- 
tego, patefacio, aperio, adaperio: (ex¬ 
plain), explieo, expiano, enodo, enu- 
cleo, interpretor; expono: (uncover), 
aperio, nudo, patefacio.- If To open 
or begin to speak, incipere ; silentium 
rumpere.-IF To open or bark as a 
