Significatio vocis violaceus | Babel Free
[wi.ɔˈɫaː.ke.ʊs]Definitiones
Exempla
“Mē . . . iuuene uiolācea purpura uigēbat, cuius lībra dēnāriīs centum uenībat, nec multō post rubra Tarentīna. huic successit dibapha Tyria, quae in lībrās dēnāriīs mīlle nōn poterat emī. hāc P. Lentulus Spinthēr aedīlis curūlis prīmus in praetextā ūsus inprobābātur. quā purpurā quis nōn iam . . . trīclīniāria facit?”
In my day, violet-colored (i.e., dark) purple was in esteem, and you could buy it for a hundred denarii a pound, and shortly after that, the red Tarentine purple. Then appeared double-dyed Tyrian, which you by the pound couldn't buy with a thousand denarii. Publius Lentulus Spinther, when he was aedile of the curule seat, used this purple in his praetexta toga, first one to do that, and he was criticized for it. This purple, who doesn't now make already dining room cushions with it?
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