Mano, manas, âre. To spring or runne out, as water doeth: to droppe out: to runne out as as sweate out of the poores: to descende: to proceede: to go or spreade abroad.Sudor ad imos manabat talos. Hora. The sweare ran downe to his feete.Aqua manar de flumine.Ouid.Guttæ sanguinee manant de vulnere.Ouid.Droppe.Manat è frontibus.Cicer.It springeth or runneth out of the fountaines: it proceedeth from the verie springs.Ingenium meum manat paupere vena.Ouid.Mella manant ex ilice. Hor. Droy out of.Manabant omnibus gaudio lachrymæ. Li. The teares trickled downe al their cheekes for ioy.Gelidus toto manabat corpore sudor. Virgil. Al his bodie was in a colde sweate.Vnda manat fontibus. Tibul. Manat cruore culter.Liu.The bloud dropped from the knife: the knife was dropping wette with bloud.Manat sudore. Liuius. He sweateth so, that it runneth downe with droppes.Manat picem hæc arbor. Plin. Pitch issueth or runneth out of this tree. Latius manabic hæc ratio.Cic.This kinde of oration wyll serne to many other vses: or will stretch to the handlyng of other matters also.Manaucrant Capua consilia in exercitum omoem. Li. The counsailes beginning at Capua were spread ouer al the parts of the armie lying in other places.Tristis Mutina fama manauit.Cic.Euill newes or sorrowfull tydings came from Mutina.Manat rota vrbe rumor.Liu.The bruite thereof was spread and sowne through all the citie.Quum serperet in vrbe infinitum malum, idq; manaret in dies latius, &c.Cic.And the same did spreade further andfurther, or increased enery day more and more.Manabat illud malum vrbanum, & ita corroborabatur quotidie.Cic.That mischiefe in the citie did so increase and take roote euery day more and more.Manantia vlcera. Plin. Running sores: or sores that spreads farther and farther.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
māno, āvi, ātum, 1, v. n. and a. [prob. for mad-no; Sanscr. madas, drunkenness; Gr. madaro/s, flowing; cf.: madeo, madidus; also Gr. ma=no/s], to flow, run, trickle, drop, distil, etc. I.Lit.(a).Neutr.: manat omni corpore sudor, Enn. ap. Macr. S. 6, 1 (Ann. v. 399); cf.: manat item nobis e toto corpore sudor, Lucr. 6, 944: gelidus toto manabat corpore sudor, Verg. A. 3, 175: tepidae manant ex arbore guttae, Ov. M. 10, 500: fons manat, id. ib. 9, 664: cruor, id. ib. 13, 887: lacrima, Hor. Ep. 1, 17, 59: sanies, id. C. 3, 11, 19: Herculis simulacrum multo sudore manavit,
, Liv. 23, 31, 15: cultrum ex volnere extractum manante cruore prae se tenens, Liv. 1, 59, 1: alvei manantes per latera et fluctu superurgente,
leaking through the joints of the side
, Tac. A. 2, 23: longā manantia labra salivā, Juv. 6, 623.—(b).Act., to give out, shed, pour forth: Indica gemma in attritu sudorem purpureum manat,
gives out
, Plin. 37, 10, 61, 170: lacrimas marmora manant, Ov. M. 6, 312.—Poet.: fidis enim manare poëtica mella Te solum, to distil poetic honey, i. e. to be a poet, Hor. Ep. 1, 19, 44.— B.Transf., of things not fluid, to flow, diffuse or extend itself, to spread: aër, qui per maria manat, Cic. N. D. 1, 15, 40: sonitus per aures, Lucr. 6, 927: multa a luna manant, et fluunt, Cic. N. D. 2, 19, 50: manat dies ab oriente, Varr. L. L. 6, 4 Müll.: manare solem antiqui dicebant, cum solis orientis radii splendorem jacere coepissent, Paul. ex Fest. p. 158 Müll.—II.Trop., to diffuse or extend itself, to spread, get abroad: cum malum manaret in dies latius,
daily spreads farther
, Cic. Phil. 1, 2, 5; cf.: malum manavit per Italiam, id. Cat. 4, 3, 6: manat tota urbe rumor, Liv. 2, 49: manat et funditur disserendi ratio per omnes partis sapientiae, Cic. Tusc. 5, 25, 72: cum tristis a Mutina fama manaret, id. Phil. 4, 6, 15: nomen usque ad Pythagorae manavit aetatem, id. ib. 5, 3, 8: fidei bonae nomen manat latissime, id. Off. 3, 17, 70: manavit ea benignitas ex urbe etiam in castra, Liv. 24, 18.—B. Esp., to flow, spring, arise, proceed, emanate, have its origin, originate from any thing: peccata ex vitiis manant, Cic. Par. 3, 1, 22: omnis honestas manat a partibus quattuor, id. Off. 1, 43, 152: ab Aristippo Cyrenaica philosophia manavit, id. de Or. 3, 17, 62: unde omnia manant, videre, id. ib. 3, 2, 27.—C.To escape, be forgotten: omne supervacuum pleno de pectore manat, Hor. A. P. 337.