Extraneus, & Domesticus, contraria. Cic. Causa extranea. Author ad Heren. A forraine cause.Cognomine extraneo demonstrare id quod suo nomine Appellari non potest. Author ad Heren. Res extraneæ. Author ad Heren. Temporall and externall things, not in our bodie or minde.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
extrānĕus, a, um, adj. [extra], that is without, external, extraneous, strange, foreign (mostly post-Aug.; syn.: peregrinus, alienus, adventicius, externus). I. In gen.: causa, Auct. Her. 3, 2, 2: cognomen, id. ib. 4, 31, 42.—II. In partic., with respect to one's family, strange, not related, foreign.—Esp. A. Leg. t. t.: heredes extranei, not of one's blood or household: ceteri, qui testatoris juri subjecti non sunt, extranei heredes appellantur, Gai. Inst. 2, 161; Dig. 45, 3, 11 et saep.—B.Subst.: extrānĕus, i, m., a stranger: ut non tam in extraneum translatum quam in familiam reversum videretur, Just. 1, 10: filiam extraneorum coetu prohibere, Suet. Aug. 69; id. Claud. 4 fin.: finis vitae ejus nobis luctuosus, amicis tristis, extraneis etiam ignotisque non sine cura fuit, Tac. Agr. 43; id. A. 4, 11; Plin. 28, 4, 7, 39; Vulg. Psa. 68, 9 al.—Hence, adv.: extrā-nĕe, strangely, impertinently: definire, Boëth. Arist. Top. 1, 14.