Citations:porro

Adverb: "on, forward"

 * c. 254 – 184 , Plautus, Mercator 5.2.98:
 * Porrō proficīscor quaesītum.
 * On I go searching.

Adverb: "away, yonder"

 * c. 254 – 184 , Plautus, Rudens 4.3.101–102:
 * TRACHĀLIŌ. Ubi tū hīc habitās? GRIPUS. Porrō illīc longē ūsque in campīs ultimīs.
 * TRACHALIO. Where do you live here? GRIPUS. There away, all the way in the farthest fields.
 * p. 431 , Macrobius, Saturnalia 3.3.3 in Bibliotheca Teubneriana, Franz Eyssenhardt (editor), Leipzig 1868, page 170:
 * Prōfānum omnēs paene cōnsentiunt id esse quod extrā fānāticam causam sit, quasi porrō ā fānō et ā religiōne sēcrētum.
 * Almost all agree profane to be that which is outside of what pertrains to a temple, as if away from the altar and separate from religion.
 * Almost all agree profane to be that which is outside of what pertrains to a temple, as if away from the altar and separate from religion.

Adverb: "outwards, away, outside"

 * Prōmissum capillum dīcitur longum. Item barba prōmissa velut porrō missa.
 * Long hair is called grown out. Likewise grown out beard, as if “directed outwards”.
 * Long hair is called grown out. Likewise grown out beard, as if “directed outwards”.

Adverb: synonym of

 * p. 380 , Egeria, Itinerarium Egeriae 43.7:
 * Disputante autem episcopō singula et nārrante, tantae vōcēs sunt collaudantium, ut porrō forās ecclēsiā audiantur vōcēs eōrum.
 * But while the bishop was discussing and narrating details, such are the voices of the worshipping, that they are heard all the way outside the church.

Adverb: furthermore, besides

 * c. 125 , Gaius Lucillius, Satires (fragments), I.15–16 in C. Lucilii Carminum reliquiae, Friedrich Marx (editor), Bibliotheca Teubneriana, Leipzig 1904, page 4:
 * Porrō ‘clīnopodas’ ‘lychnōs’que ut dīximŭs semnōs ante 'pedēs lectī' atque 'lucernās'
 * Besides, the way we say “clinopodes” and fancy “lychni” rather than “bed-feet” and “lamps”

Adverb: then

 * c. 1007 – c. 1072, Peter Damian, Vita Sancti Rodulphi et Sancti Dominici Loricati, chapter XII in Patrologia Latina (volume 144), Jacques-Paul Migne (editor), 1867, page 1021:
 * Interim vērō dum hujusmodī precibus frequenter īnsisteret, bis per somnium cōnfortātus audīvit: quia ferrāmenta illa jam essent dīvīnitus resolūta. Porrō autem in fēstīvitāte beātōrum apostolōrum Simōnis et Jūdae repente duo illa ferrāmenta quae super humerōs posita utrinque īnferius dēpendēbant, ventremque cum rēnibus coarctābant, prōrsus effrācta sunt, et ūnum in duās, alterum in trēs dīvīsum est partēs.
 * Meanwhile however, while he was persevering with prayers of this kind, he heard himself being conforted twice in a dream that these irons already had been miraculously unbound. Afterwards, during the feast of the holy apostles Simon and Thaddeus two of the irons that were hanging down from both sides from the shoulders and covered the belly and kidneys were broken, one in two and the other in three parts.
 * Meanwhile however, while he was persevering with prayers of this kind, he heard himself being conforted twice in a dream that these irons already had been miraculously unbound. Afterwards, during the feast of the holy apostles Simon and Thaddeus two of the irons that were hanging down from both sides from the shoulders and covered the belly and kidneys were broken, one in two and the other in three parts.

Adverb: in turn

 * c. 220 – c. 165 , Caecilius Statius, Plocius fragment 7 in Scaenicae Romanorum Poesis Fragmenta (volume 2, second edition), Otto Ribbeck (editor), Bibliotheca Teubneriana, Leipzig 1898, page 73:
 * Cōnsequitur comes īnsomnia, ea porrō īnsāniam affert.
 * Sleeplessness follows [love] as attendant, it, in turn, brings madness.