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  1. A Latin Dictionary. Founded on Andrews' edition of Freund's Latin dictionary. revised, enlarged, and in great part rewritten by. Charlton T. Lewis, Ph.D. and. Charles Short, LL.D. Oxford. Clarendon Press. 1879. The National Endowment for the Humanities provided support for entering this text.

  2. 2. To press with one's body (in an embrace). (b) (of men, male animals) to copulate, have intercourse with. 3. To press (a part of the body, etc., against anything); ~mere pollicem (app.) to press the thumb against the forefinger as a sign of good omen. (b) habenas ~mere, or sim., to press down the reins (so as to draw them tight).

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  4. Find premere (Verb) in the Latin Online Dictionary with English meanings, all fabulous forms & inflections and a conjugation table: premo, premis, premit, premimus, premitis, premunt

  5. verb. to apply pressure. Quorum cognita sententia Octavius quinis castris oppidum circumdedit atque uno tempore obsidione et oppugnationibus eos premere coepit. Octavius, being informed of their determination, surrounded the town with five encampments, and began to press them at once with a siege and storm. en.wiktionary2016.

  6. transitive and intransitive verb III conjugation. View the declension of this word. 1 to press, to press hard, to pursue. 2 to oppress. 3 to overwhelm. permalink. << prĕmens. prĕmor >>.

  7. WordSense Dictionary: premo - spelling, hyphenation, synonyms, translations, meanings & definitions.

  8. premo in Latin dictionary. present active premō, present infinitive premĕre, perfect active pressī, supine pressum. Caesar interim quoniam inopia frumenti premebatur, copias omnes in castra conducit atque praesidio Lepti Ruspinae Acyllae relicto, Cispio Aquilaeque classe tradita, ut alter Hadrumetum, alter Thapsum mari obsiderent, ipse ...

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