Aemulor, pen corr. æmularis, æmulâri. Cicer.With a certaine enuy and ambition to indenour to passe and excell an other man: to follow or study to be lyke an other: to imitate or counterfaite.Æmulari cum aliquo. Liuius. Consummati iam patroni veteribus æmulantur. Quint.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
aemŭlo, āre, v. a. An active form for aemulor (q. v.), App. M. 1, p. 112.
aemŭlor, ātus, 1, v. dep. [aemulus], to rival, to endeavor to equal or to excel one, to emulate, vie with, in a good and bad sense; hence (as a consequence of this action). to equal one by emulating.I. In a good sense, constr. with acc., v. II.: quoniam aemulari non licet, nunc invides, Plaut. Mil. 3, 2, 26: omnes ejus instituta laudare facilius possunt quam aemulari, Cic. Fl. 26; Nep. Epam. 5; Liv. 1, 18; cf. Tac. H. 3, 81: Pindarum quisquis studet aemulari, Hor. C. 4, 2, 1; Quint. 10, 1, 62: severitatem alicujus, Tac. H. 2, 68: virtutes majorum, id. Agr. 15 et saep.—Transf. of things: Basilicae uvae Albanum vinum aemulantur, Plin. 14, 2, 4, 30.—Prov.: aemulari umbras,
to fight shadows
, Prop. 3, 32, 19 (cf. Cic. Att. 15, 20: qui umbras timet).—II. In a bad sense, to strive after or vie with enviously, to be envious of, be jealous of, zhlotupei=n; constr. with dat., while in the first signif. down to Quint. with acc.; v. Spald. ad Quint. 10, 1, 122; Rudd. II. p. 151: iis aemulemur, qui ea habent, quae nos habere cupimus, Cic. Tusc. 1, 19; cf. 4, 26; Just. 6, 9.—Also with cum: ne mecum aemuletur, Liv. 28, 43: inter se, Tac. H. 2, 81.—With inf.: aemulabantur corruptissimum quemque pretio inlicere, Tac. H. 2, 62.—Hence, aemŭlanter, adv., emulously, Tert. c. Haer. 40.