Schola, scholæ, f. g. Cic.A schole or colledge.Cœtus scholatum, Quin.Consuerudo scholarum. Quin. Exercitationes scholarum. Quin. Frequentia scholarum. Quin. Philosophorum scholæ. Qui. The sectes of philosophers.Magnæ scholæ. Quiot. Audire hominem de schola. Ci. Definire in schola. Ci. Eligere scholas, Quin. Explicare scholam. Ci. To declure the opinions of anyesecte of phlosophers.Fugere scholas. Quint. Institutæ seuerè scholæ. Quin. Homo politus è schola. Ci. Vitarc scholas. Qun. Scholæ. Ci. Lessons or disputations betweene the maisters and the scholers.Habere scholas.Cic.To keepe schooles: to reade and haue scholers. Epicuri schola. Ci. Regestæ scholæ in commentarios. Quin. Vertere sead alteram scholam. Ci. Pomeridianis scholis Aristoteles præcipere artem oratoriam cœpit. Qui. Aristotle in the afternoone began to read precepts of Rhetoricke.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
schŏla (scŏla), ae, f., = sxolh/ (spare time, leisure; hence, in partic.), I.Leisure given to learning, a learned conversation or debate, a disputation, lecture, dissertation, etc.: in quam exercitationem (disputandi) ita nos studiose operam dedimus, ut jam etiam scholas Graecorum more habere auderemus ... Itaque dierum quinque scholas, ut Graeci appellant, in totidem libros contuli, Cic. Tusc. 1, 4, 7; 8: separatim certae scholae sunt de exsilio, de interitu patriae, etc.... Haec Graeci in singulas scholas et in singulos libros dispertiunt, id. ib. 3, 34, 81: scholam aliquam explicare, id. Fin. 2, 1, 1: habes scholam Stoicam, id. Fam. 9, 22, 5: vertes te ad alteram scholam: disseres de triumpho, id. Pis. 25, 60: ubi sunt vestrae scholae, id. ib. 27, 65; Quint. 3, 6, 59 Spald.—B.Transf.1.A place for learned conversation or instruction, a place of learning, a school (cf. ludus): toto hoc de genere, de quaerendā, de collocandā pecuniā, commodius a quibusdam optimis viris ad Janum medium sedentibus quam ab ullis philosophis ullā in scholā disputatur, Cic. Off. 2, 25, 90: qui cum in scholā assedissent, id. de Or. 1, 22, 102; 1, 13, 56; Suet. Gram. 17; Quint. 3, 11. 26: politus e scholā, Cic. Pis. 25, 59: e philosophorum scholis tales fere evadunt, id. Or. 27, 95; Quint. 1, prooem. 17; 12, 3, 12: rhetorum, id. 12, 2, 23: potiorem in scholis eruditionem esse quam domi, id. 2, 3, 10; 5, 13, 45; so (opp. forum) id. 5, 13, 36: ut ab Homero in scholis, Plin. Ep. 2, 14, 2.—b.A gallery where works of art were exhibited: Octaviae scholae, Plin. 36, 5, 4, 29; cf. id. 35, 10, 3, 114.—c. Scholae bestiarum, a place where animals fight, an amphitheatre, Tert. Apol. 35.—2.The disciples or followers of a teacher, a school, sect: clamabunt omnia gymnasia atque omnes philosophorum scholae, sua haec esse omnia propria, Cic. de Or. 1, 13, 56: ejus (Isocratis) schola principes oratorum dedit, Quint. 12, 10, 22; cf.: Theodori schola, id. 3, 11, 26: scholae Asclepiadis, Plin. 14, 7, 9, 76: dissederunt hae diu scholae, id. 29, 1, 5, 6: Cassianae scholae princeps, Plin. Ep. 7, 24, 8.—b. In the time of the later emperors, a college or corporation of the army or of persons of the same profession: Schola Exceptorum, Chartulariorum, Singulariorum, etc., Cod. Th. 12, 20, 20; 12, 17, 2 et saep.; Cod. Just. 4, 65, 35; Amm. 14, 7, 12.—c.The building of that corporation, Inscr. in Jahn's Neue Jahrb. vol. 66, p. 338.— II.A place in a bathing-room where one waited before entering the bath, a waiting-place, Vitr. 5, 10 fin.