HomeServicesBlogDictionariesContactSpanish Course
← Ad quaestionem redi

Significatio vocis cucuma | Babel Free

Nomen femininum CEFR B1
[ˈkʊ.kʊ.ma]

Definitiones

  1. kettle, cauldron, boiling vessel
  2. for cooking
  3. for bathing

Aequivalentia

English cauldron Kettle

Exempla

Mox incincta quadrato pallio cucumam ingentem foco apposuit, simulque pannum de carnario detulit furca, in quo faba erat ad usum reposita et sincipitis vetustissima particula mille plagis dolata.”

After girthing herself with a rectangular apron she put a vast cauldron to the fire, and at the same time she put down a rag from the smoke chamber, in which beans were stored for use as well as a bit of a head-half cut with thousand strikes.

“118 – 138 π Hadrian in Dig. XXXXVIII.8.1.3 Marcianus libro quarto decimo institutionum Divus Hadrianus rescripsit eum, qui hominem occidit, si non occidendi animo hoc admisit, absolvi posse, et qui hominem non occidit, sed vulneravit, ut occidat, pro homicida damnandum: et ex re constituendum hoc: nam si gladium strinxerit et in eo percusserit, indubitate occidendi animo id eum admisisse: sed si clavi percussit aut cucuma in rixa, quamvis ferro percusserit, tamen non occidendi animo. leniendam poenam eius, qui in rixa casu magis quam voluntate homicidium admisit.”

Godly Hadrian wrote in a rescript concerning him who smote a man that he can be absolved if this is not by intent to kill, and who did not smite him but wounded him that he smite him is to be convicted for homicide: and from the said thing has to be constituted: when he touched him with the sword and smote him by this, without doubt intent to kill him has to be admitted: but when he hit him with a key or a kettle in a brawl, though he hit him with iron, nonetheless he hasn’t done it with the intent to kill. To be lightened is the punishment of him who has allowed in a brawl rather by accident than by intent a killing.

“Torquātus nitidās variō dē marmore thermās”

Torquatus put forth brilliant thermae from various marble; Otacilius made a cauldron.

Gradus CEFR

B1
Medius
Hoc verbum pars est vocabularii CEFR B1 — gradus medius.
See all B1 Latina words →

Vide etiam

Hoc verbum in contextu disce

Vide cucuma in veris colloquiis adhibitum in cursu nostro linguae gratuito.

Cursum Gratuitum Incipe

Know this word better than we do? Language is a living thing — help us keep it growing. Collaborate with Babel Free