Insolentia, huius insolentiæ, f. g. Cic.Seldomenes of vse in any thing: vnhaunting of a place.Insolentia sermonis. Li. The straungeues of talke or speech.Moueor etiam loci ipsius insolentia. Cice. I am moued also with the newnes or straungeues of the place.Insolentia voluptatum.Cic.The strangenes or vnwõted vse of pleasures. Insolentia.Cic.Pride: arrogancie: insolencie: presumption: lordlines.Ex arrogantia odium, ex insolentia arrogantia.Cic.Insolentiam & iactationem hominum ferre.Cic.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
in-sŏlentĭa, ae, f. [insolens]. I.A being unaccustomed to a thing, unusualness, novelty; with gen. (class.). A. In gen.: fori, judiciorumque, Cic. Rosc. Am. 31, 88: itineris, Sall. J. 94, 2: loci, Cic. Deiot. 2, 5: voluptatum, id. Cael. 31, 75: disputationis, id. de Or. 1, 22.—B. Rhet., unusualness, novelty, strangeness, affectedness in the choice of words: orationis, Cic. Brut. 82, 284: verborum, id. de Or. 3, 13: peregrina, id. ib. 12.—In plur.: insolentias verborum a veteribus dictorum respuere, Gell. 13, 21, 22.—II.Want of moderation, pride, haughtiness, arrogance, insolence: illa tua singularis insolentia, superbia, contumacia, id. Verr. 2, 4, 41, 89; id. ib. 2, 3, 44, 106; lavish indulgence; opp. continentiam, id. Phil. 9, 6, 13; id. Fam. 9, 20, 1: hominis, id. de Or. 2, 52, 209: modeste insolentiam suam continere, id. Agr. 1, 6, 18: ex secundis rebus, Sall. J. 40, 5: insolentiam alicui obicere, Nep. Epam. 5: gloriae, id. Ag. 5. — Plur.: spiritus a noxiorum insolentiis premitur, Phaedr. 3, epil. 31.