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† trĭācontăs, ădis, f., = τριακοντάς, the number thirty, Tert. adv. Val. 49 fin.
trĭangŭlāris, e, adj. [triangulus], of or belonging to a triangle, triangular: anfractus, Mart. Cap. 6, § 579.
trĭangŭlus, a, um, adj. [tres-angulus], having three corners or angles, threecornered, triangular.
trĭārĭi, ōrum, m. [tres], a class of Roman soldiers who formed the third rank from the front, the triarii, Varr. L. L. 5, § 89 Müll.: etiamsi te sors inter triarios posuerit, Sen. Tranq. 3, 10; Liv. 22, 5, 7: a primā acie ad triarios sensim referrebantur, id. 8, 8, 11; 8, 10, 6; cf. Becker, Antiq. 3, pt. 2, p. 249 sq.
Trĭārĭus, ii, m., a surname in the gens Valeria.
† trĭăs, ădis, f., = τριάς, the number three, a triad, Mart. Cap. 7, § 733.
‡ trĭātrus, a feast-day among the Tusculans, three days after the Ides, Fest. s. v. quinquatrus, p. 257 Müll.