Meaning of iniūria | Babel Free
[ɪnˈjuː.ri.a]Definitions
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injury, wronging, offense, insult, wrong declension-1
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injustice, wrongdoing declension-1
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damage, harm, hurt, injury declension-1
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slander declension-1
Equivalents
Examples
“SĪMŌ: Sī propter amōrem uxōrem nōlet dūcere, / ea prīmum ab illō animum advortenda injūriast.”
SIMO: If [my son] refuses to marry because of love, that is the first wrong of his which [I could have him] reconsider. (Elision: iniuriast = iniuria + est. Idiom: “uxorem ducere,” literally “to lead a wife”, i.e., to marry. Another idiom: “animum advortenda” means, more literally, “attention must be turned away from”. In this context, Simo is implying that he will rebuke his son for acting this way.)
“Nec hoc ignōrant, sed occāsiōnem nocendī captant querendō; accēpērunt iniūriam ut facerent.”
They aren’t unaware of this [tendency], but they seize the opportunity to do harm by complaining; they [let it be known that they] received an injury in order to inflict one. (In other words, an arrogant slave-master, angered by some offense to his pride, retaliates by torturing his slave. Seneca here plays off two meanings of iniuria: a mere “insult” becomes the excuse to inflict a physical “injury.”)
CEFR level
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.
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