Dissolutio, onis. f. g. Verbale. cuius contrarium est Coniunctio. Cic.A nissoluing or leusing.Remissio animi & dissolutio.Cicer.Basenes of courage and vtter lacke of stomack.Dissolutio criminum, Ci.A purgatiõ or auswering of thingslaide to our charge.Iudiciorum dissolutiones.Cic.Legum dissolutio.Cic.Abolishing or breaking of lawes.Dissolutio naturæ, mors.Cic.Death.Dissolutio stomachi. Plin. Weakenes of the stomack reany to vomit.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
dissŏlūtĭo, ōnis, f. [dissolvo], a dissolving, destroying, breaking up, dissolution (good prose). I.Lit.: navigii, Tac. A. 14, 5: naturae (mors), Cic. Leg. 1, 11; id. Fin. 5, 11, 31; cf. id. ib. 2, 31: stomachi, i. e.
looseness
, Plin. 20, 22, 91, 248.—II.Trop.A. In gen., an abolishing, a destruction: legum omnium, Cic. Phil. 1, 9: imperii, Tac. A. 13, 50.—Absol., ruin, Vulg. Isa. 8, 22. B. In partic. 1.A reply, refutation: criminum, Cic. Clu. 1, 3; cf. Auct. Her. 1, 3, 4.—2. (Acc. to dissolutus, A.) As rhet. t. t., want of connection, interruption: constructio verborum tum conjunctionibus copuletur, tum dissolutionibus relaxetur, Cic. Part. 6, 21; cf. Quint. 9, 3, 50; Auct. Her. 4, 30.—3. (Acc. to dissolutus, B.) Of character, looseness, i. e. weakness, effeminacy, frivolity; dissoluteness: si humanitas appellanda est in acerbissima injuria (sc. vindicanda) remissio animi ac dissolutio, Cic. Fam. 5, 2, 9; so, judiciorum, id. Verr. 2, 4, 59 fin.; Treb. Pol. XXX. Tyr. 23: dissolutio et languor, Sen. Ep. 3 fin.; cf. animorum, id. Cons. Sap. 4.