nitidus

Etymology
From. The extended sense of 'pure, clean' (first attested in Marcellus Empiricus, ca. 400 CE) survives in the Gallo- and Italo-Romance descendants of the word.

Adjective

 * 1) shining, polished, glittering
 * 2) handsome, beautiful, good-looking
 * 3)  healthy-looking, well conditioned
 * 4)  sleek, plump
 * 5) * Horace, Q. Horatii Flacci Satiræ. The Satires of Horace, in Philip Francis, A Poetical Translation of the Works of Horace, With the Original Text, vol. 2, 1749, publ. by A. Millar, page 178, line 214.
 * "la"

- Si quis lecticâ nitidam geſtare amet agnam;


 * 1)  blooming, fertile
 * 2)  cultivated, refined
 * 3)  pure, clean

Descendants

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