Pompey's Letters Vocab

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To Marcellus and Lentulus

existimo, -are: judge, value, consider
dispergo, -ere, -persi, -persus: scatter, disperse
idcirco: therefore
vereor, -eri, veritus sum: fear, dread
implico, -are: involve, entangle, engage
firmus, -a, -um: steady, strong, durable
colloco, -are: arrange, station, put in order
expedio, -ire, -ivi, -itus: disengage
sollicitudo, -inis, f.: concern, anxiety
subsidium, -i, n.: help, relief
committo, -ere, -misi, -missus: bring together, entrust
illuc: to that place, thither
contrahō, -ere, -trāxī, -trāctus: assemble, draw together
dīmittō, -ere, -mīsī, -missus: leave, abandon
placeo, -ere, placui, placitus: please
ob: on account of
censeo, -ere, -ui, -itus: judge, assess
dēportō, -āre: carry off, take away
vehementer: exceedingly, very much
prōsum, prōdesse, prōfuī: be useful, benefit

To Domitius, 11 February

valde: greatly, intensely, very
disicio, -ere, -ieci, -iectus: scatter, divide
constituo, -ere, -ui, -utus: set up, prepare, determine
levis, -e: light, trivial, capricious
propterea: for this reason
magis: more
quantō: by how much, by as much as
appropinquo, -are: approach, come near to
adversarius, -a, -um: hostile, adverse, inimical
coepio, -ere, coepi, coeptus: begin
desisto, -ere, -stiti, -stitus: cease, stop, give up
distraho, -ere, -traxi, -tractus: separate, divide, tear apart
servo, -are: preserve
impetro, -are: obtain, procure, succeed

To Domitius, 17 February

reddo, -ere, reddidi, redditus: deliver
praemoneo, -ere, -monui, -monitus: forewarn
committo, -ere, -misi, -missus: bring together in a fight
implico, -are: entangle, engage
expeditus, -a, -um: unencumbered, free, open
confido, -ere, -fisus sum: have confidence in
dīmicō, -āre: fight
ratio, -onis, f: method, plan
explico, -are: disentangle
nosco, -ere, novi, notus: learn, become acquainted with
praetereo, -ire, -ivi, -itus: pass by, disregard, excel