Lewis & Short

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ăcoenōnētus, i, m., v. the foll.

ăcoenŏnŏētus, i, m., = ἀκοινονόητος, one who has not common-sense, Juv. 7, 218: communi carens seusu, Schol. ad h. 1. (Herm. and Rib.; but Jahn and Mayor here read ἀκοινώνητος (in Greek letters); perh. not sharing, i. e. selfish).

ăcoetis, is, f., ἄκοιτις, a bed-fellow, a wife: Amphitryonis, Lucil. ap. Non. 26, 5.

ăcŏnae, ārum, f., = ἀκόναι, pointed stones: nudae cautes, Plin. 27, 3, 3, § 10.

ăcŏnīti, adv., = ἀκονιτί, without labor (lit. without dust, the figure taken from the athletae, Hor. Ep. 1, 1, 51), Plin. 35, 11, 40, § 139.

ăcŏnītum, i, n., = ἀκόνιτον, a poisonous plant, wolf’s-bane, monk’s-hood, aconite, Plin. 27, 2, 2; 6, 1, 1 fin.: aconiton, Ov. M. 7, 407.
In plur., Verg. G. 2, 152; Ov. M. 7, 419; Aus. Idyll. 12, 9, 11; Luc. 4, 322.
For a strong poison in gen., Ov. M. 1, 147; Juv. 10, 25.

ăcontĭas, ae, m., = ἀκοντίας.

  1. I. A quick-darting serpent, Amm. 22, 15, 27.
  2. II. In plur., ăcontĭae, ārum, = ἀκοντίαι, meteors or shooting-stars with dartlike trains, Plin. 2, 25, 22, § 89.

Ăcontĭus, i, m.

  1. I. A lover of Cydippe, Ov. Her. 20, 239, and 21, 229.
  2. II. A mountain in Boeotia, Plin. 4, 7, 12.

ăcontīzo, āre, v. n., = ἀκοντίζω, lit., to shoot a dart; hence, intrans. of blood, to spout or gush forth, Veg. 1, 26 and 27.

Ăcontīzŏmĕnos, i, m., = Ἀκοντιζόμενος (struck with a dart), the title of a comedy of Naevius, see the fragment in, Rib. Com. Rel. p. 5.

ăcŏpos, -us, i, m., or ăcōpon, -um, i, n., = ἄκοπος (removing weariness, pain, etc.).

  1. I. A kind of stone, perh. crystalline quartz or spar, Plin. 37, 10, 54, § 143.
  2. II. f., a plant useful in childbirth, also called anagyros, id. 27, 4, 13.
  3. III. Aco-pum (sc. medicamentum or unguentum), i, n., a soothing salve, Cels. 4, 31; 5, 24; Plin. 23, 8, 80; 29, 3, 13 al.

ăcor, ōris, m. [aceo], a sour taste, sourness.

  1. I. Lit., Col. 3, 21, 5; 7, 8, 1; Plin. 11, 41, 96; 18, 11, 26; of meat, Quint. 9, 3, 27.
  2. II. Fig. hortor ut jucundissimum genus vitae nonnullis interdum quasi acoribus condias, i. e. excitements, Plin. Ep. 7, 3 fin.

ăcorna, ae, f., = ἄκορνα, a kind of thistle, Plin. 21, 16, 56, § 95.

ăcŏrus, i, f., and ăcŏrum, i, n., = ἄκορος and ἄκορον, an aromatic plant, conjectured by some to be our sweet-flag or calamus, Plin. 25, 13, 100, § 157 sq.; 26, 5, 15, § 28; Cels. 3, 21; 2, 23 al. In the form acoros, i, f., App. Herb. 6.