Aer, cibus locus. salúbres dicuntur. Col. Holesome.Annus salubris & pestilens, contraria. Ci. Aquæ salubres. Hor. Aura salubris.Ouid. Fluuius saluber. Virg.Herbis salubribus sanare curas. Tibul. Maluæ salubres corpori. Hor. Chelidonia visui saluberrima. Plin. Consilium salubre Ci Good and profitable counsaile.Adoptio salubris pupillo. Vlpn adoption prositable to the ward.Factum salubre.Ouid.Liber studijs salubrior, qum dulior. Quin. More prositable than pleasant.Dicere sententiam Reip saluberrimam. Ci. Verba salubria, Ouid.Holesome wordes by which a disease is cured, or a dead man ratsed to life.Quicquid salsum at salubre in oratione, id proprium Atticorum cst.Cic. Salubre corpus.Sal.A whole and sound bodie.Si salubres factæ sunt. Ci. If they be cured or healed.Salúbritas. pe. co. salbritâtis, f. g. Pli. Health: bolesomenesse.Salubrìtas cœli arque temperies. Plin. An holsome and temperate aire.Quid in ea boni sit, salubritatisque. Cato. Propter salubritatem. Caæs. For healthes sake.Vrbis vel alicuius loci salubritas. Ci. The wholesome situation, &c.Afferre salubritatem, Colu. Dictionis salubritas, per translationem.Cic.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
āēr, āĕris, m. (in Enn. once fem., Gell. 13, 20, 14, as also a)h/r in Gr., in the earliest per, was fem., Gr. gen. aëros, Stat. Th. 2, 693; Gr. acc. aëra, Cic., Sen., Plin.; pure Lat. form, āĕrem, Varr. L. L. 5, 10, 65; Cato ap. Serv ad Verg. A. 10, 184; Plin. 18, 1, 1, 3; plur nom. and acc. āĕres, Vitr. 11; later āĕra, Ven. Fort. Carm 9, 1, 141, dat. āĕribus, Lucr. 4, 289; 5, 643), = a)hr, the air, properly the lower atmosphere (in distinction from aether, the upper pure air): istic est is Juppiter quem dico, quem Graeci vocant Aërem, qui ventus est et nubes, imber postea, Atque ex imbre frigus, ventus post fit, aër denuo, Enn. ap. Varr L. L. 5, 65 Müll. (Epicharm. v. 9 Vahl.,: terra circumfusa undique est hac animall spirabilique naturā, cui nomen est aër, Graecum illud quidem, sed perceptum jam tamen usu a nostris, tritum est enim pro Latino, Cic. N. D. 2, 36, 91: itaque aër et ignis et aqua et terra primae sunt, id. Ac. 1, 7, 26: Anaximenes aëra Deum statuit, id. N. D. 1, 10: aërem in perniciem vertere, Plin. 18, 1, 1, 3 al.—Also in plur.: aëribus binis, Lucr 4, 291: aëres locorum salubres aut pestilentes, Vitr 1, 1 fin.—II.Transf.A.Poet.: aër summus arboris, the airy summit, for the highest point, Verg. G. 2, 123; cf. Juv. 6, 99.—B. Also poet. for a cloud, vapor, mist: Venus obscuro gradientes aëre sepsit, Verg. A. 1, 411: aëre septus, Val Fl. 5,401—C. With limiting adj. = the weather: crassus, Cic. Ac. 2, 25, 81. fusus et extenuatus, id. N. D. 2, 39 purus et tenuis, id. ib. 2, 16 temperatus, id. Div 2, 421. aera (dissyl.), ae, f., = ai)ra, a weed among grain; darnel, tare, or cockle, Lolium temulentum, Linn.; Plin. 18, 17, 44, 156.
āĕrĭus (quadrisyl.), more rar. āĕrĕ-us, a, um, adj., = a)e/rios.I.Pertaining to the air, aërial (a poet. word, which Cic. uses only in higher flights of speech): volucres, Lucr. 5, 825; Cic. Univ. 10: volatus avium atque cantus, id. Top. 20: aërias vias carpere,
their way in the air
, Ov. A. A. 2, 44: aërias tentăsse domos, the heavens, Hor. C. 1, 28, 5 al.—Hence aërium mel, because the bee was believed to collect its honey from falling dew, Verg. G. 4, 1. —II.Rising aloft, airy, high.—So esp. of mountains: Alpes, Verg. G. 3, 474; Ov. M. 2, 226: aërio vertice Taurus, Tib. 1, 7, 15 (aetherio, Müll.): cacumen, Cat. 64, 240 al. —Of trees: quercus, Verg. A. 3, 680: ulmus, id. E. 1, 59.—Of other things: arces, Verg. A. 3, 291: (capra) cornibus aëriis, Ov. F. 5, 119.—B. Aëria spes, airy, i. e. quickly flying away, vain, fleeting, transitory, Arn. 2, p. 86.