Aliunde, ad hominem relatum. Cic. Non quo aliunde audieris. Of any other person.Aliunde assumpto bono vti, non proprio, necsuo.Cic.Aliunde factum verbum.Cic.Aliunde nota. Quint. Aliunde pendêre.Cic.To hang vpon other men.Aliunde petere copiam dicendi.Cic.Aliúsmodi. pen. cor. Quasi alterius modi, Cæs. In an other maner: of an other fashion.Alkakengi.An hearbe called also Halicacabus and Vesicaria. in english Alkakengie, medicinable for strangurie: colde and dry in the second degree.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
ălĭunde, adv. [2. alius-unde]. I.From another place, person, or thing, from a different place, person, or thing, a)/lloqen (most freq. in Cic.): sive aliunde ipsi porro (nomen) traxere,
from some other place
, Lucr. 3, 133; so id. 5, 522; 6, 1020: eum assumpto aliunde uti bono, Cic. de Or. 2, 10, 39: ascendit aliunde (Gr. a)llaxo/qen), Vulg. Joan. 10, 1. —II. Esp. A. With verbs which are regularly constr with ab or ex, like pendere, mutuari, sumere, stare, etc.: non aliunde pendere, Cic. Fam. 5, 13, 2; id. Or. 24, 80: aliunde mutuati sumus, id. Att. 11, 13: audire aliunde, id. Lig. 1, 1: aliunde dicendi copiam petere, id. de Or. 2, 9, 38; Cat. 61, 149; Plin. 33, 8, 40, 118: nec aliunde magis sues crassescunt, id. 13, 18, 32, 110: Radice (thyi) nihil crispius nec aliunde pretiosiora opera, id. 13, 16, 30, 102: adeo ut totum opus non aliunde constet,
of nothing else
, id. 30, 1, 2, 5.—B. Repeated: aliun, de ... aliunde, from one place, etc., .. from another: qui aliunde stet semper, aliunde sentiat, i. e.
to be on one side and take part with the other
, Liv. 24, 45: Sardonyches e ternis glutinantur gemmis aliunde nigro, aliunde candido, aliunde minio, etc., Plin. 37, 12, 75, 197.—C. With the kindred words alius, alio, aliter, etc.: aliis aliunde est periculum,
danger threatens one from one source
,
another from another
, Ter. Phorm. 2, 2, 19: qui alii aliunde coibant, Liv 44, 12, 3: aliunde enim alio transfugiunt,
from one place to another
, Sen. Brev. Vit. 16, 2: aliunde alio commigratio est, id. Cons. ad Helv. 6, 6: aliunde alio transiliens,
from one subject to another
, id. Ep. 64, 1.— D. With quam: nec fere aliunde (invehitur ad nos) quam ex Hispaniā,
from any place except
, Plin. 33, 8, 40, 118: sideri assidue aliunde quam pridie exorienti, id. 2, 97, 99, 213: cum populatio morum atque luxuria non aliunde major quam e concharum genere proveniat, id. 9, 34, 53, 104.—With a somewhat changed expression in Cic.: itaque aliunde mihi quaerendum est, ut et esse deos et quales sint di, discere possim, quam quales tu eos esse vis, for quam a te, Cic. N. D. 3, 25, 64.