Lewis & Short

Parsing inflected forms may not always work as expected. If the following does not give the correct word, try Latin Words or Perseus.

in-vĕrēcundus, a, um (inverĕcundus, Ven. de Vit. S. Mart. 1, 393), adj., without shame, shameless, immodest.

  1. I. Of persons: impudens, impurus, inverecundissimus, Plaut. Rud. 3, 2, 43: deus, i. e. Bacchus, Hor. Epod. 11, 13.
  2. II. Of things: frons, Quint. 2, 4, 16: animi ingenium, Poët. ap. Cic. Inv. 1, 45, 83: animus, Suet. Gram. 15.
    In neutr, sing.: inverecundum est, it is shameful, Dig. 32, 1, 23.
    Comp.: quid inverecundius, Val. Max. 7, 7, 1.
    Adv.: invĕ-rēcundē, without shame, shamelessly (postAug.): aliqua aetas fuerit, quae translationis jure uteretur inverecunde, Sen. Ep. 114, 1: dicere, Quint. 7, 4, 10: privatorum parietes, aedibus sacris inverecunde conexi, irreverently, Amm. 27, 9, 10.
    Comp., Hier. Ep. 128, 2: dicere, Aug. Ep. 155, 3, § 11.