Lexicon ID = 1000142
1.
abdūcō, abdūcere,
abdūxī, abductus duco verb (3rd conjugation) |
- to lead away, take away, carry off, remove, lead aside
- [especially] to take home (to dine)
- to take (prisoner), arrest
- to take apart, lead aside (for a private interview)
- to carry away forcibly, ravish, rob
- [figuratively] to lead away, separate, distinguish
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ab-dūcō dūxī, ductus, ere (imper. sometimes abdūce, T.), to lead away, take away, carry off, remove, lead aside: filiam abduxit suam, has taken away (from her husband), T.: cohortes secum, Cs.: squalent abductis arva colonis, drafted (for the war), V.: ipsos in lautumias-- (poet.): tollite me, Teucri, quascumque abducite terras (i. e. in terras), V.: pluteos ad alia opera, conduct, Cs.: capita retro ab ictu, draw back, V. -- Esp., to take home (to dine): tum me convivam solum abducebat sibi, T.--To take (prisoner), arrest: hunc abduce, vinci, T.: e foro abduci, non perduci, arrested for debt, not enticed (by a love-adventure). -- To take apart, lead aside (for a private interview): Iugurtham in praetorium, S.--To carry away forcibly, ravish, rob: filia, vi abducta ab tibicine: soceros legere et gremiis abducere pactas, steal betrothed damsels from their bosoms, V.-- in jurid. lang.: auferre et abducere, to take and drive away (auferre of inanimate things, abducere of living beings), C. -- Fig., to lead away, separate, distinguish: animum a corpore: divinationem a coniecturis.--To seduce, alienate: legiones a Bruto: equitatum a consule: servum ab avo.--From a study, pursuit, or duty, to withdraw, draw off, hinder: a quo studio abduci negotiis: aliquem a quaestu: ab isto officio incommodo.--To bring down, reduce, degrade: ad hanc hominum libidinem me.