camus

Etymology
, from, from. Compare 🇨🇬.

Adjective

 * 1) flat-nosed

Etymology
From, 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1)  a punishment device, perhaps a kind of collar for the neck
 * 2)  a kind of collar for the neck, a necklace or neckband
 * 3)  collar, muzzle or snaffle (as for a horse or an ass)

Quotations
For the sense punishment device; necklace:

In Quintus Horatius Flaccus' Satirae or Sermones, liber I, the reading of this word is doubtful: it may either have been cāmus as a punishment device, or Cadmus as a proper noun. Compare for example: Deicere de saxo civīs aut tradere camo?“ deicere de saxo civis aut tradere Cadmo?"
 * Des Q. Horatius Flaccus Sermonen, vol. I, ed. Hermann Fritzsche, Leipzig, 1875, page 154f.:
 * „Tune, Syri, Damae, aut Dionysi filius, audes
 * Horace Satires, Epistles and Ars poetica with an English translation by H. Rushton Fairclough, 1942, page 78f.:
 * "tune, Syri, Damae aut Dionysi filius, audes
 * "Do you, the son of a Syrus, a Dama, a Dionysius, dare to fling from the rock or to hand over to Cadmus citizens of Rome?"

In Lucius Attius or Accius as cited by Nonius Marcellus, cāmus is interpreted as a punishment device or a necklace. See for example: . quid cesso ire ád eam? em, praesto ést: camo collúm gravem. Nonius, 200, 16: ' Collus' masculino. . .– Alcmeo . . . Quid cesso ire ad eam? Em praesto est: camo collum graven! Alcmaeon sees Eriphyle decked with the necklace with which she was bribed: Nonius: 'Collus' in the masculine. . .– Alcmaeon I'll not Delay to approach her. See! She is at hand. How heavy with the neck-band is her throat!
 * Nonius Marcellus, De compendiosa doctrina, p. 200, line 16f. In: Wallace M. Lindsay ed., Nonii Marcelli de conpendiosa doctrina, vol. I, LL. I–III, Leipzig, 1903, page 294:
 * Collus masculino Accius Epigonis (302):
 * Otto Ribbeck, Scaenicae romanorum poesis fragmenta. Vol. I, Leipzig, 1897, page 202f.:
 *  quid cesso ire ád eam? em praesto est: <ém> camo collúm grauem!
 * Non. 200, 15 'collus masculino Accius Epigono . . .'
 * Tr. E. H. Warmington, Remains of Old Latin, vol. II, 1936, page 426f. (Lucius Accius (or Atticus), Epigoni):
 * 287
 * 287

Etymology
From, from , of origin, see also 🇨🇬, , 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1) bumblebee
 * 2) * Elbing German-Prussian Vocabulary
 * Hu͡mele  Camus