Aequo, æquas, æquâre. Plin. Cic.To make euen or playne, equall or like.Aequare solo vrbes, domos, turres, ædificia.Liu.To beate or cast to the ground, to raze.Aequare solo Dictaturam, Metaphorice dictum, pro abrogare.Liu.Cleane to abolish.Amorem æquare.Virg.To lone as much as he is loued.Ammum æquare natalibus.Ouid.To haue hact or courage equall to his stocke.Aequare cœlum videtur pontus.Ouidius.Seemeth to be as high as the sky.Ducem vadentem æquare.Virg.To go as fast as. &c.Formas veras imitamine æquare.Ouid.To represent.Laborem operum æquare iustis partibus.Virg.To giue as much trauaile and payne to one as to an other.Numerum ceruorum æquare cum nauibus. Virgil. To kill as many hearts, as there were shippes. Aequare, cum datmo.Virg. Animos æquabit olympo. Quibus cælo te laudibus æquem? Virg. Aequare pondus denarij. Plin. To be of the same weight.Temperamentum æquare. Plin. To make of the same temperature.Aequat pretia excellentium margaritarum. Plin. It is of as great a price as &c. Aequare quempiam re aliqua.Liu.To be as excellent in any thing, as an other is.Equitem æquare cursu.Liu.To tunne as fast as, &c.Herculem æquare palma. Curtius. To he as victorious as Hercules. Aequare picturam alicuius Plin.To paint as well as he. Aequare se cum alio.Cic.To esteeme him selfe nothing inferiout to one.Aequare conserréque scelera alicuius cum alterius sceleribus.Cic.To compare and set one against the other.Aequare Annibali Fhilippum.Liu.To compare. Aequare.Liu.To part or deuide equally. Aequare ludÛ nocti.Virg.To continue play all night long.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
aequo, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a. and n. [aequus]. I.Act., to make one thing equal to another; constr. with cum and (in gen. in the histt.) with dat., and with cop. conj. (cf. adaequo). (a). With cum: inventum est temperamentum, quo tenuiores cum principibus aequari se putarent, Cic. Leg. 3, 10: cum suas quisque opes cum potentissimis aequari videat, Caes. B. G. 6, 22: numerum (corporum) cum navibus, Verg. A. 1, 193.— (b). With dat.: Insedabiliter sitis arida, corpora mersans, Aequabat multum parvis umoribus imbrem,
an unquenchable
,
burning thirst ... made the most copious stream seem to them as only a few drops
, Lucr. 6, 1176: per somnum vinumque dies noctibus aequare, Liv. 31, 41: aequavit togatus armati gloriam collegae, id. 4, 10, 8: cujus magnitudini semper animum aequavit, id. 33, 21, 3 (but in id. 6, 20, 8, facta dictis aequando, dictis is abl.; v Weissenb. ad h. l.); Vell. 2, 127; aequare solo templum,
to level with the ground
, Tac. A. 1, 51; so domum, Quint. 3, 7, 20, and Aur. Vict. Vir. lllustr. 17. 5; and in an extended sense: Scipio Numantiam excisam aequavit solo, Vell. 2, 4.—Hence, trop.: solo aequandae sunt dictaturae consulatusque, entirely abolished, Liv 6, 18.—(g). With cop. conj.: Curios aequare Fabriciosque, Aur. Vict. Caes. 18, 2. —Poet.: si protinus illum Aequāsset nocti ludum,
had played through the whole night
, Verg. A. 9, 338.—Hence also, B. In comparison, to place a thing on an equality with, to compare.; in Cic. with cum; later with dat.: aequare et conferre scelera alicujus cum aliis, Cic. Verr. 1, 1, 8: ne aequaveritis Hannibali Philippum, ne Carthaginiensibus Macedonas: Pyrrho certe aequabitis, Liv. 31, 7: Deum homini non aequabo, Vulg. Job, 32, 21: quis in nubibus aequabitur Domino, ib. Psa. 88, 7.—C. Of places, to make level, even, or smooth: aequata agri planities, Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 48; and trop.: aequato discrimine,
at an equal distance
, Lucr. 5, 690: aequato omnium periculo, Caes. B. G. 1, 25: aequato Marte, Liv. 1, 25: aequato jure omnium, id. 2, 3.—Poet.: ibant aequati numero, divided into equal parts, Verg. A. 7, 698: foedera regum Vel Gabiis vel cum rigidis aequata Sabinis, i. e. aequis legibus icta, Hor. Ep. 2, 1, 25; cf.: si foedus est, si societas aequatio juris est ... cur non omnia aequantur?
placed in the same circumstances?
Liv. 8, 4.—D. T. t. 1. Aequare frontem, milit. t., to make an equal front, Liv. 5, 38: aequatis frontibus, Tib. 4, 1, 102; v. frons.—2. Aequare sortes, to see that the lots are equal in number to those who draw, of the same material, and each with a different name. The classical passage for this phrase is Plaut. Cas. 2, 6, 35: conicite sortes: uxor, aequa (sc. eas); v. the preceding verses. So Cic. Fragm. Or. Corn. 1, p. 449 Orell.: dum sitella defertur, dum aequantur sortes, dum sortitio fit, etc.—II.Neutr. or act., to become equal to one, to equal, come up to, attain to (mostly in the histt.); constr. with dat., but oftener with acc. (cf. adaequo and aequipero, and Zumpt, 389, 1): qui jam illis fere aequārunt, Cic. Off. 1, 1, 3; Ov. M. 6, 21: ea arte aequāsset superiores reges, ni, etc., Liv. 1, 53; so, cursu equum, id. 31, 35; for which Curtius: cursum alicujus, 4, 1: gloriam alicujus, Suet. Caes. 55: eam picturam imitati sunt multi, aequavit nemo, Plin. 35, 11, 40, 126; Luc. 3, 456.—Poet.: sagitta aequans ventos, like the winds in swiftness, Verg. A. 10, 248: valet nondum munia comparis Aequare (juvenca), i. e.