Significatio vocis cerasium | Babel Free
[kɛˈra.si.ũː]Aequivalentia
English
Cherry
Exempla
“cerasia alvum molliunt, stomacho inutilia; eadem siccata alvum sistunt, urinam cient.”
Translation by W. H. S. Jones Cherries relax the bowels, but are injurious to the stomach; dried cherries arrest looseness of the bowels and are diuretic.
“Ceterum si propterea Liber deus, quod vitem demonstravit, male cum Lucullo actum est, qui primus cerasia ex Ponto Italiae promulgavit, quod non est propterea consecratus ut frugis novae auctor, qui ostensor.”
But if Bacchus is made a god because he discovered the grapevine, Lucullus, who first introduced cherries from Pontus to Italy, has not been fairly dealt with; for as the discoverer of a new fruit, he has not, as though he were its creator, been awarded divine honours.
“κεραϲιον cerasium [Greek] κεράσιον [is in Latin] cerasium”
Gradus CEFR
B2
Medius superior
Hoc verbum pars est vocabularii CEFR B2 — gradus medius superior.
Hoc verbum pars est vocabularii CEFR B2 — gradus medius superior.
Know this word better than we do? Language is a living thing — help us keep it growing. Collaborate with Babel Free