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The word Phocæa could not be parsed. Trying a normal dictionary lookup:
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† phōcă, ae, and phōcē, ēs, f., = φώκη, a seal, sea-dog, sea-calf (pure Lat. vitula marina), Verg. G. 4, 432: deformes phocae, Ov. M. 1, 300; so id. ib. 2, 267; Plin. 9, 7, 6, § 19. Proteus had a span of seadogs: Protea huc rexisse vias junctis super aequora phocis, Val. Fl. 2, 319. A grandson of Cephisus is fabled to have been changed by Apollo into this animal, Ov. M. 7, 388.
Phōcaea, ae, f., = Φωκαία, a maritime town of Ionia, a colony of the Athenians, whose inhabitants fled, to escape from Persian domination, and founded Massilia, now Fouges or Foggia, Mel. 1, 17, 3; Plin. 5, 29, 31, § 119; 5, 30, 32, § 121; Liv. 37, 31 sq.; cf. Gell. 10, 16, 4, and v. 2. Phocis, B.
Hence,
Phōcăĭcus, a, um, v. Phocaea, C., and 2. Phocis, D.
Phōcăis, ĭdis, v. Phocaea, D.
Phōcenses, ĭum, v. Phocaea, E., and 2. Phocis, A.
Phōcēus, a, um, v. 2. Phocis, B.
Phōcĭi, ōrum, v. 2. Phocis, C.
Phōcĭon, ōnis, m., = Φωκίων, an Athenian general, a contemporary of Demosthenes, whose life is written by Nepos.
1. phōcis, ĭdis, f., a kind of pear-tree on the isle of Chios, Plin. 17, 24, 37, § 237.
2. Phōcis, ĭdis, f., = Φωκίς, the country between Bœotia and Ætolia, in which were the mountains of Parnassus and Helicon, the Castalian spring, and the river Cephisus, Mel. 2, 3, 4; Plin. 4, 3, 4, § 7; Liv. 28, 5, 16; Ov. M. 1, 313; Stat. Th. 1, 64.
Phōcus, i, m., = Φῶκος, son of Æacus, who was slain by his brother Peleus, Ov. M. 7, 477; 11, 267.