HoraceSatires1.6.1-11Vocab
Lȳdĭa, ae, f.: a country in Asia Minor, the capital of which was Sardis, the fabled original land of the Etruscans. Lȳdus, a, um, adj., Lydian; transf., Etrurian, Etruscan.— As subst.: Lȳdi, ōrum, m.
fīnis, is m.: in plural, borders, and hence territory, land, country enclosed within boundaries
gĕnĕrōsus -a, -um: of good or noble birth, noble, eminent
impĕrĭto (1): to command, govern, rule (+ dat.)
nāsus, i, m.: nose
suspendo, -ere: hang up, cause to be suspended. Aliquem or aliquid naso (adunco), to turn up one's nose at, to sneer at a person or thing (Horatian)
ăd-uncus, a, um: hooked; nasus, a hooked or aquiline nose
ignōtus, a, um: unknown; of low birth or condition, lowborn, base, vulgar
lībertīnus, a, um: of or belonging to the condition of a freedman (opp. ingenuus, of the condition of a freeborn person); lībertīnus, i, m., a freedman (in reference to his status in society or the state; whereas a freedman was called libertus in reference to the manumitter)
rēfert (or separately rē fert), referre, rettŭlit: it matters, imports, concerns, it is of importance or consequence
ingĕnŭus, a, um: freeborn, born of free parents
Servius Tullius, the sixth king of Rome, born of a slave mother.
regnum, -i n.: reign
amplus, -a, -um: great, abundant, ample
hŏnor or hŏnos, -ōris m.: public honor, official dignity, office, post, preferment
augĕo, -ēre, auxi, auctum: Aliquem (aliquid) aliquā re, to furnish abundantly with something, to heap upon, give to, to enrich, endow, bless, load with.