porro

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) leek

Etymology
~, from.

Noun

 * 1)  leek
 * 2)  spliff

Etymology
Probably reappropriated from the name documented for , for which a longer form of  is also known. Possibly clipped from.

Noun

 * 1) any plant of the genus
 * 2)  the genus
 * 1)  the genus

Etymology
13th century. From, from.

Noun

 * 1)  leek
 * 2)  joint marijuana cigarette
 * 1)  joint marijuana cigarette

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) leek
 * 2) wart

Etymology

 * the traditional view (supported by ancient grammarians) connects it with the, similar in form and meaning. However, the old form of this Greek word, , would not easily align with the derivation of the Latin word. Moreover, adverbs are not usually borrowed from other languages. In all probability related to Proto-Indo-European.

De Vaan clarifies the archaic Praenestinian Latino-Faliscan POROD is not an ablative, and mentions a very tentative derivation, by Nussbaum, of Proto-Indo-European *pro- + an adverbial -s + the suffix observed in, , , effectively *prs-ō > *porsō > porrō.

Adverb

 * 1)  on, forward, onward
 * 2)  forward
 * 3)  away, yonder
 * 4)  outwards, away, outside
 * 5) * p. 384 , Egeria, Itinerarium Egeriae 36.3:
 * Quī locus ad quod lectus fuerit, tantus rugītus et mūgītus totīus populī est cum flētū, ut forsitan porrō ad cīvitātem gemitus populī omnis audītus sit.
 * Which place, when it had been read up to it, there’s such a roar and bellow of the people with crying, that the groan of the entire crowd was perhaps heard all the way to the city.
 * 1) then
 * 2)  then, furthermore, besides
 * 3) * c. 186 , Martial, Epigrams, preface to book II:
 * “Quid nōbīs” inquis “cum epistulā? Parum enim tibi praestāmus, sī legimus epigrammata? Quid hīc porrō dictūrus es quod nōn possīs versibus dīcere?”
 * “What do we” you say “have to do with a letter? are we supporting you too little if we read your epigrams? Besides, what are you going to say here that you couldn’t in verse?”
 * 1)  then, afterwards, thereafter, in the future
 * 2)  then, and
 * 3) * 4th C. , Saint Jerome, Vulgate, Numbers 26:20–21:
 * "la"
 * 1) * c. 186 , Martial, Epigrams, preface to book II:
 * “Quid nōbīs” inquis “cum epistulā? Parum enim tibi praestāmus, sī legimus epigrammata? Quid hīc porrō dictūrus es quod nōn possīs versibus dīcere?”
 * “What do we” you say “have to do with a letter? are we supporting you too little if we read your epigrams? Besides, what are you going to say here that you couldn’t in verse?”
 * 1)  then, afterwards, thereafter, in the future
 * 2)  then, and
 * 3) * 4th C. , Saint Jerome, Vulgate, Numbers 26:20–21:
 * "la"
 * 1) * 4th C. , Saint Jerome, Vulgate, Numbers 26:20–21:
 * "la"
 * "la"

- Fuēruntque fīliī Jūda per cognātiōnēs suās: Sēla, ā quō familia Sēlaītārum: Phares, ā quō familia Pharesītārum: Zare, ā quō familia Zareītārum. Porrō filii Phares: Hesrōn, ā quō familia Hesrōnītārum: et Hamūl, ā quō familia Hamūlītārum.


 * 1)  further, on
 * 2) * 143 , Marcus Cornelius Fronto, Epistles to Emperor Marcus Aurelius 1.3:
 * "la"
 * "la"

- Tuus igitur iste amor incultus et sine ratiōne exortus, spērō, cum cedrīs porrō adolēscet et aesculīs.


 * 1) in turn
 * 2)  on the other hand, but
 * 3) * c. 360 , Hilary of Poitiers, Commentaries on the Gospel of Matthew 6.3 in Patrologia Latina (volume 9), Jacques-Paul Migne (editor), 1844, page 952:
 * Arduum in coelum iter hominis est, et aditus angustus ac tenuis: cēterum perditiōnis via lāta est. Īlanc plūrēs obtinent, illam porrō paucī inveniunt.
 * Uphill is the road of man to heaven, and the gate is narrow and small: on the other hand, the way of damnation is broad. The latter many conquer, while the former but few find.
 * 1) * 4th C. , Saint Jerome, Vulgate, Luke 11:19–20:
 * "la"
 * Uphill is the road of man to heaven, and the gate is narrow and small: on the other hand, the way of damnation is broad. The latter many conquer, while the former but few find.
 * 1) * 4th C. , Saint Jerome, Vulgate, Luke 11:19–20:
 * "la"

- Sī autem ego in Beelzebūb ēiciō daemonia, fīliī vestrī in quō ēiciunt? Ideō ipsī iūdicēs vestrī erunt. Porrō sī in digitō Deī ēiciō daemonia, profectō pervenit in vōs rēgnum Deī.


 * 1)  (back) then, in the past
 * 2) * 5th C. , Anianus of Celeda (translator), Homilies on Matthew 2.2, original author: John Chrysostom, in Patrologia Graeca (volume 58), Jacques-Paul Migne (editor), 1862, page 990:
 * "la"
 * "la"

- Ūsque adeō enim istud mīrābile erat, et nūllī ante prōrsus audītum, ut etiam angelī in chorum eārum rērum grātiā collēctī, tōtīus orbis nōmine propter ista glōriam concinerent, faustamque attollerent acclāmātiōnem; et prophetae porrō ante cum admīrātiōne praedīcerent: Quoniam super terram vīsus est, et cum hominibus conversātus est.

Etymology
From, from.

Noun

 * 1) leek, syn. Allium porrum, a vegetable

Etymology 1
From, possibly borrowed through. Compare the (undoubtedly) inherited doublet, showing the expected diphthongization of stressed Latin ŏ.

Noun

 * 1)  leek

Etymology 2
From.

Adjective

 * 1)  stupid

Noun

 * 1)  a member of a criminal shock group, mainly targeting student protesters

Etymology 3
.

Noun

 * 1) joint, spliff, blunt  marijuana cigarette, reefer