TUR 
TWE 
TUR 
TUMBREL ( dung-cart ), plaustrum ster- 
corarium. 
TUMEFY, tumefacio. 
Tumefaction, inflatio, tumor. 
Tumid, turaidus. 
Tumor (swelling), tumor; inflatio. 
TUMULT, tuinultus, turba or turbfe, tu- 
multuatio, seditio. — To make or raise a 
tumult, tumultuor, turbas cisre. 
Tumultuary, tumultuarius. 
Tumultuarily, tumultuose. 
Tumultuation, oonfusa agitatio; tumul- 
tuatio. 
Tumult uou3, tumultuosus, seditiosus ; 
turbulentus ; procellosus. 
Tumultuously, tumultuose, turbulenter; 
temere. 
TUN, dolium majus ; vas amplius 44 am- 
phorum capax. — Of or belonging to a 
tun, doliaris. — Tun-bellied, ventriosus, 
ventrosus, ventruosus. 
To Tun wine or ale, vinum or cerevisiam 
in cados infundere. 
TUNE, modi, moduli, numeri; cantus.— 
I remember the tune if I could, but think of 
the words, numeros memini, si verba te- 
nerem, Virg. — To be in tunc, modulate 
sonare or canere ; modos servare ; con- 
cordare : fig. ad aliquid agendum habi- 
lern, aptum or idoneum esse. — To be 
out of tune, dissono, male sonare, dis- 
crepo : fig. male affectum esse ; stoma- 
chosum esse; tristem esse; ad aliquid 
agendum minime idoneum esse. — / 
am not in tune for poetry to-day, versus 
hodie non libens facio.— To sing a song 
in tunc, carmen modulari or modulate 
canere. — To set the tune as a clerk, cce- 
tui pracinere. 
To Tune an instrument, fidiculas apte 
contendere; numeris apte modulandis 
nervos intendere. — Well-tuned, tuneful, 
apte modulatus. — The flutes and viol¬ 
ins were exceedingly well tuned, modula- 
tissimu3 erat tibiarum et fidium cantus. 
— Ill-tuned, dissonans, sono discrepans, 
inale modulatus. 
Tunable, numerosus, canorus; apte 
modulatus, harmonious. — A tunable 
voice, vox canora or modulate cadens. 
Tunableness, modulatio, harmonia. 
Tunably, numerose, modulate. 
Tuneless, modulationis expers. 
Tuner, modulator. 
Tuning, modulatio, modulatus: (harmo¬ 
nious music), modulatus canorus, Sen. 
TUNIC, tunica. — The tunic or tunicle of 
the eye, oculi tunica or tunicula. 
TUNNAGE, TONNAGE, tributum in 
singula dolia impositum: (money paid 
for weighing), vectigal pro mercium 
ponderation'e solutum. 
TUNNEL, infundibulum. — of a chimney, 
camini tubus. 
TURBAN, say tiara. i 
Turbaned, tiaratus, Sidon. 
TURBiD, turbidus, limo turbatus ; fiecu- 
lentus. 
TURBINATED (spiral), turbinatus. 
TURBULENT, turbulentus, tumultuo- 
sns, violentus, seditiosus. — A turbulent 
sedition, seditio turbulenta; popuii mo- 
tus or tumultus. 
Turbule nc y of spirit, animus turbulentus. 
Turbulently, turbulenter, seditiose. 
I URF, ctespes ; gleba fossilis. — A green 
turf, ctespes vivus or gramineus.’— A 
little turf, glebula. 
^ ter /)>'< - *spititius. 
TURGID, turgidus, tumidus. 
luRGiniTY of language, verborum tumor; 
oratio inflata ; ampul ae. 
TURK, Turca. 
Turkish, Turkey, adj. Turcicus. — A 
Turkey carpet, tapes Turcicus or Phry- 
gius. 
Turkey cock, gallus Indicus.— hen, calli- 
na Indica. 
TiTD K iArs C ri P ( herh h IiIi,,m rnartagon (L.). 
TURKors, cauais . tlI rcosa (L.). 
I^JJERIC, curcuma lenga (L.). 
t URMOIL, tumultus, seditio, turba. 
1 v, (labor hard), corpus labori- 
Pitd\t an = ere ’ fatl g aie or debilitare. 
1 (bend), verto, converto; flecto : 
( ecome), fio; evado: (change or convert), 
muto; in aliam naturam convertere. 
(see Alter and Transform.) — Turned, 
Yersns ; deflexus, inflexus ; inutatus.— 
urot turned or changed, indeflexus. — To 
turn or be turned, se convertere, con¬ 
vert!. — To turn about (v. a.), circum- 
verto, cjrcuinago. (See Revolve). — To 
turn head against, oppugno, reluctor; 
obnitor. — To turn aside a blow, ictum 
tied mare. — To turn aside (v.n.)from 
the way, (de via) deflectere; (via) dever- 
tere. To turn away or from, averto, 
v. a.; deverto, deflecto. — To turn away 
the eyes from one, oculos dejicere ab ali- 
quo. — To turn back, revertor; redeo. 
— To turn one's back. (See Back.) — To 
turn one's back upon one, ab aliquo se 
avertere; aliquem deserere or relin- 
quere. — They turned their backs on 
my friendship, amicitiae terga dedere 
meae. — To turn the back on all that is 
good, virtuti nuntium remittere. — 
Turned or bowed back, reflexus, recur- 
vus. — To turn cat in pan, pravaricor, 
partes or causam suam prodere. — To 
turn his coat (change sides), fidein mu- 
tare; tempori servire- To turn his 
course another way, cursum alio incli- 
nare, dirigere, flectere. — To turn a dis¬ 
course another way or to some other sub¬ 
ject, sermonem alio transferre. — To 
turn down the bed-clothes, revolvere lecti 
stragula. —To turn the edge of a weapon, 
teli aciem retundere, obtundere, hebe- 
tare. — To turn fool, ineptio, stulti par¬ 
tes agere. — To turn his forces against 
one, alicui copias obvertere. — To turn 
from one and look another way, vultum 
avertere or oculos dejicere ab aliquo._ 
To turn one, from his wicked courses, ali¬ 
quem a vitiis revocare ; in frugem con¬ 
vertere or reducere. — To turn into 
Latin, Latine reddere or vertere. (See 
Translate.) — To turn into an inn for the 
night, ad cauponem devertere. — To 
turn merchant, mercaturam exercere; ad 
merces commutandas se conferre.— To 
turn a mill, versare molam_ To turn 
(cast) off, rejicio, repudio, aspernor; di- 
mitto (dismiss). — To turn out, ejicio, 
extrudo, expello. — They turn him out 
of the town, ex oppido ilium ejiciunt. — 
He was turned out of his kingdom, regno 
exutus est. — To turn one out of an of¬ 
fice, \oco suo aliquem movere ; munus 
alicui abrogare .—Having severely rep¬ 
rimanded the tribunes, he turned them out 
of their office, tribunos graviter increpi- 
tos potestate privavit, Suet _ To turn 
one out of the senate, aliquem senatu 
movere. — To turn a person out of doors, 
aliquem foras exigere, Cic .; aliquem 
ex ffidibus exturbare. — To turn out (as 
a seaman out of his hammock), e lecto 
evolvere se or excuti. —To turn (go) out 
of the way, deflectere de (via); (vi&) de¬ 
vertere, de via degredi. — To turn the 
best side outermost, speciosam personam 
sustinere. — To turn over, inverto; 
evolvo, pervolvo. — / must turn over a 
new leaf, alio more vivendum est mihi. 
— To turn over an apprentice to another 
master, artis alicujus tironem alii mams- 
tro transferre. — To turn papist, trans¬ 
ire ad pontificios. —- To turn round 
(v. a.), verto, converto, circuinverto ; 
verso ; circumago (e. g. equum); flecto 
(e. g. currum): v. n. se versare, se cir- 
cumagere, circumagor, circumferor, cir- 
cumvertor; se gyrare; se vertere or 
convertere. — He or it turns round, in 
gyrum flectitur. — That may be turned 
round, versatilis ; revolubilis. —To turn 
(act.) to, alicui aliquid advertere, ob¬ 
vertere. — the back to one, tergum alicui 
obvertere. —To turn or change to (v. a.), 
mutare in ; resolvere in : v. n. mutari or 
convert! in ; resolvi in. — It will turn to 
some great mischief, evadet in aliquod 
magnum malum. — His rashness turned 
to his honor, temeritas ejus in gloriam 
cessit. — To turn to a proverb, in pro- 
verbium venire or cedere. — They either 
turn to rain or wind, aut in aquam, aut 
in ventum resolvuntur. — To turn a 
thing to one’s own use, aliquid in usum 
81111 m convertere ; averto. — To turn or 
betake one's self to a thing, alicui rei se 
dedere; animum ad aliquid adjungere 
or appellere; studium in aliquot re col- 
locare ; ad studium rei alicujus se con¬ 
ferre. -— To turn t.opsy turvy or upside 
down, inverto, ex imo vertere ; subverto. 
He has turned all things upside down, 
omnia miscuit et sursum deorsum ver- 
savit. — To turn up the around (in di ,r - 
289 
ffing), terram effodere. — To turn with 
the face upward, resupino.-IT A soul 
well turned for love, egregia ad amorem 
indoles.-IT To turn as a turner does, 
* torno, detorno, torno facere. 
Turn (circuit), circnitus.— A turn or taking 
a turn (in walking), ambulatio, deainbula- 
tio, inambuiatio. — Having taken a turn 
or two, duobus tribusve spatiis factis.— 
To take a turn, ambulo, deambulo,prode- 
anibulo. — When they have taken two or 
three turns, cum aliquot spatia confece- 
■'int.-If In the turn of the hand, mo- 
inento or puncto temporis.-IT At 
every turn, identidem. - IT Things 
look a new turn, subita rerum conversio 
facta est.-IT A man of a different 
turn, homo <1 iversa: indolis et ingenii. 
(See Character, and the like.)-IT A 
turn (or course), vicissitudo, vices, par¬ 
ies. — JVuw it is my turn, ineaj nunc 
sunt vices. — If this man speak, permit 
me also to speak in my turn, si iste loqui¬ 
tur, sine me pro mel parte ioqui, Plant 
— By turn or course, aiterne, vicissim, 
invicem, alternis vicibus, alfernatim. — 
All in turn, omnes deinceps. — To go 
round in turn, per omnes in orbem ire. 
— To do a thing by turns, alterno ; aiter- 
nis vicibus aliquid agere.— To take one's 
turn, vice suS. aliquid agere. — Done by 
turns, alternus. --If To setve a turn, 
alicujus rationibus conducere. — To 
serve one’s turn, alicui satisfacere or sa¬ 
tis esse. — It will serve my turn, mihi sat 
est. — You see this excuse will not serve 
your turn, ademptam banc quoque tibi 
causam vides.-IT A good turn, be- 
nefleium, benefaction ; promeritum. — 
They have a mind to do him a good turn, 
huic prodesse Golunt. — To do one as 
good a turn, tantam gratiam referre. — 
An ill turn, injuria, noxa, oflensa; dam¬ 
num, detrimentum. — Shrewd turn, 
maleficium. 
Turner, tornator.- d turner's lathe, ma- 
china tornatorum. 
Turning (winding), versatio, versura. — 
A turning away from, a versatio. — A 
turning about, rotatio. — A turning back 
again, reversio, reditio, reditus.°— A 
turning upside down, inversio, conver¬ 
sio, subversio. — A turning round, ver¬ 
satio ; rotatio; circumactio. — A turn¬ 
ing of horses or oxen at the land's end, 
versura. — A crooked turning, anfrac- 
tus ; vise flexio ; versura (corner ).— 
Full of crooked turnings, anfractuosus, 
sinuosus, tortuosus. — A turning or by¬ 
way, deverticulum. 
Turncoat, qui fidem mutat or tempori 
servit. 
Turnpike, septum versatile in viSt pub¬ 
lic!. 
Turnspit, qui carnem veru affixam ad ig- 
nem versat. 
TURNIP, rapum. 
TURPITUDE (filthiness), turpitudo, fee- 
ditas. 
TURRET, turn's, turricula. 
Turreted, turritus. 
TURTLE (bird), turtur: (tortoise), testu- 
do. 
TUSH! TUT! pfui! vah ! 
TUSKS of a boar, apri dentes. 
Tusked, Tusky, dentibus falcatis instruc- 
tus. 
TUTELAGE, tutela ; anni pupillares. 
Tutelar or Tutelary deity of a place, 
deus or dea prases loci; deOs or dea in 
enjus tutelS. locus est. 
TUTOR (teacher), praceptor domesticus 
or privatus ; qui operam privatim ado- 
lescentibus docendis impendit; pracep¬ 
tor. 
To Tutor (instruct) a person in an affair, 
alicui de aliqu! re pracipere; manda- 
ta or pracepta alicui dare_ Tutored, 
doctus, edoctus, praceptis imbutus. ’ 
Tutorage, praceptoris munus. 
Tutoress. See Governess. 
Tutoring, institutio, praceptio. 
TWAIN, duo; bini. 
TWANG (shrill sound), clangor: (ill 
tone in speaking), prava eiocutio. — To 
speak with a twang, male pronuntiare, 
prave enuntiare. 
TWATTLE, garrio, blatero, deblatero. 
Tyvattling, garrulitas, garritus. 
TWEAK, v. summis digitis comprimere ; 
vellico, vello. 
