Latin-English Dictionary
ēgrĕdĭor
deponent transitive and intransitive verb III conjugation ending -io View the declension of this word 1 to go, to march, to come out 2 to set sail 3 to land, to disembark 4 to surpass, to go beyond permalink
Locutions, idioms and examplesab aliquo egredior = to leave from someone's house || egredior modum || e navi egredior || castris or ex castris egredi || ab urbe egredior = to depart from the city || (e) castris egredior || egredi a proposito || e navi egredior || ad egrediendum idoneus locus = place suitable for a landing || Bellovaci magno cum strepitu egressi sunt || a proposito declino (or egredior or aberro) = to depart from one owns purpose; to be off topic || ad capienda imperii primordia C. Caesar egrediebatur = J. Caesar came forward to pluck the first moments of power || Catilina, perge, quo coepisti, egredere aliquando ex urbe || alii qui semel egressi numquam domum reverterunt || civitati Syracusanorum egredi numerum edendis gladiatoribus finitum permittebatur Sfoglia il dizionarioA B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
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