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Citations:stipendium

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Latin citations of stipendia, stipendij, stipendio, and stipendi

  • 239 BCE – 169 BCE, Ennius, Annales , (in Varronis de lingua latina 5.183):
    [...] Poenī stīpendia pendunt
  • 86 BCEc. 35 BCE, Sallust, Bellum Jugurthinum 85.10, (“Oratio Marij”):[1]
    Bellum me gerere cum Iugurtha iußiſtis: quam rem nobilitas ægerrimè tulit. Quæſo, reputate cum animis ueſtris, num id mutari metari melius ſit, écquem ex illo globo nobilitatis ad hoc, aut aliud tale negotium mittatis hominem, ueteris proſapiæ, ac multarum imaginum, et nullius ſtipendij: ſcilicet ut in tanta re ignarus omnium trepidet, feſtinet, ſumat aliquem ex populo monitorem ſui officij.
  • c. 84 BCE – 54 BCE, Catullus, Carmina 64.171–176:
    Jūpiter omnipotēns, utinam nē tempore primō
    Cnōsia Cecropiae tetigissent lītora puppēs,
    indomitō nec dīra ferēns stīpendia taurō
    perfidus intortum religāsset nāvita fūnem,
    nec malus haec cēlāns dulcī crūdēlia fōrmā
    cōnsilia in nostrīs requiēsset sēdibus hospes!
  • c. 52 BCE, Julius Caesar, Commentarii de Bello Gallico 1.44:
    Si iterum experiri velint, se iterum paratum esse decertare; si pace uti velint, iniquum esse de stipendio recusare, quod sua voluntate ad id tempus pependerint.
    If they chose to make a second trial, he was ready to encounter them again; but if they chose to enjoy peace, it was unfair to refuse the tribute, which of their own free-will they had paid up to that time.
  • 27 BCE – 25 BCE, Titus Livius, Ab Urbe Condita 28.25.9:[2]
    in praesentia, ut coepisset, leniter agi placuit et missis circa stipendiarias civitates exactoribus stipendi spem propinquam facere.
  • 1st century CE, anonymous, Lydia 9–15, (Appendix Vergiliana):
    ō fortūnātī nimium multumque beatī,
    in quibus illa pedis niveī vestīgia pōnet
    aut roseīs viridem digitīs dēcerpserit ūvam[...]
    aut inter variōs, Veneris stīpendia, flōrēs
    membra reclīnārit teneramque illīserit herbam
    et sēcrēta meōs fūrtim nārrābit amōrēs.