Difference between revisions of "User:Lily Brustkern/Notepad/directoque vs. et recto"
From GATE
(Created page with "{{AddNote |Note title=directoque vs. et recto |Note text=Lewis & Short has: ''dīrecto'', adv., directly, in a straight line ''recto'', adv., general meaning: right, correct...") |
|||
| Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
|Note title=directoque vs. et recto | |Note title=directoque vs. et recto | ||
|Note text=Lewis & Short has: | |Note text=Lewis & Short has: | ||
| − | ''dīrecto'', adv., directly, in a straight line | + | |
| + | ''dīrecto'', adv., directly, in a straight line. | ||
| + | |||
''recto'', adv., general meaning: right, correct, proper, appropriate, befitting. In particular: morally right, correct, lawful, just, virtuous, noble, good. | ''recto'', adv., general meaning: right, correct, proper, appropriate, befitting. In particular: morally right, correct, lawful, just, virtuous, noble, good. | ||
Latest revision as of 10:36, 3 June 2026
| Note title | directoque vs. et recto |
|---|---|
| Page(s) link(s) | Page:FC 1042.djvu/79 |
Lewis & Short has:
dīrecto, adv., directly, in a straight line.
recto, adv., general meaning: right, correct, proper, appropriate, befitting. In particular: morally right, correct, lawful, just, virtuous, noble, good.
Substituted for a more moral connotation?
References