Nisi, per parenthesin positum. Cic. Adhuc certè (nisi ego insanio) ftultè omnia & incautè. Hitherto surely (if I be not out of my witte) all things haue beene done foolishly, and vnaduisedly wrought.Domitius (nisi me omnia fallunt) de se incredibiliter perimuit.Cic.Vnlesse my coniecture in all points deceiue me.Nisi si exemplarium vitium est. Plin. Nisi quis nos Dens respexerit.Cic.Quid est aliud glgantum more bellare cum dfjs, nisi naturæ repugnare? Cic.What other thing is it, as the giants did, to keepe warre with the gods, but onely to strine against nature.Quid est aliud quod nos patroni facere debeamus, nisi vt eos qui insectantur, repellamus.Cic.Nisi verò Ennium non putamus ita totÛ illud audiuisse.Cic.Nisi fortè volumus Epicureorum opinionem sequi.Cic.Vnlesse happily we will follow.Nisi tamen (quod est absurdum) credideruntid translatum & abscissum sua stirpe. Colum. Assidere enim, cibos mimstrare. manum porrigere quilibet poterat: mentior, nisi factum est. Quint. I will be counted a lyar if it were not done.
Nisus, A king, of whome it is written, that he had one golden haire, the which caused him alwaies to bee victorious. But his daughter called Scylla, stole awaie the faide haire, and brought itto Minos hir fathers enimie, whome she loued, thinking by that meanes to please him: whereby hir father was vanquished and siaine.
Nitor, niroris, Vide NITBO.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
nĭ-sĭ (archaic forms nisei and nise, Lex Rubria, v. Ritschl, Legis Rubriae pars superstes, Bonnae, 1851, and Rhein. Mus. tom. 8, p. 448 sq.), conj., if not, unless. I.A. In gen.: quid tu malum curas, Utrum crudum an coctum-edim? nisi tu mihi es tutor, Plaut. Aul. 3, 2, 15: quod nisi esset, certe postea non discessisset, Cic. Clu. 66, 189: non posse ejus imperia diutius sustineri, nisi quid in Caesare sit auxilii, Caes. B. G. 1, 31; Suet. Caes. 52.—B. With interrogatives and negatives, usually in a different clause. 1. After an interrogative or negative clause, except, save only, only: ne quis enuntiaret, nisi quibus mandatum esset, Caes. B. G. 1, 30: hoc sentio, nisi in bonis, amicitiam esse non posse, Cic. Lael. 5, 18: etenim dicere nemo potest, nisi qui prudenter intellegit, id. Brut. 6, 23: quid est pietas, nisi voluntas grata in parentes, id. Planc. 33, 82; Ov. H. 2, 27: negant enim quem quam esse virum bonum, nisi sapientem, Cic. Lael. 5, 18.—2. With a foll. negative: sic orator, nisi multitudine audiente, eloquens esse non possit, Cic. de Or. 2, 83, 338: Labienus juravit, se, nisi victorem, in castra non reversurum, Caes. B. C. 3, 87.—3. Closely connected with non (mostly post-Aug.): legationis non nisi condemnato et ejecto eo, etc., Cic. Verr. 2, 1, 39, 98: qui non nisi aput Germanias adsequi nomen imperatorium posset, Tac. A. 2, 26: ad quem non nisi per Sejanum aditus, id. ib. 4, 68; 14, 63; 15, 1; Suet. Caes. 56; id. Aug. 21; 41; Quint. 1, 5, 19; Plin. 10, 36, 52, 108; Plin. Ep. 6, 6, 4.—(The passages in which nisi was supposed to stand for nisi non or non nisi have been critically amended; v. Hand, Turs. 4, 253; Kritz and Fabri ad Sall. J. 54, 5; Drakenb. and Weissenb. ad Liv. 34, 16, 1; Duker ad Flor. 1, 12, 18.)—C. Esp. 1. After nihil, nihil aliud, etc., save, but, than: nihil am plius nisi, Cic. Planc. 41, 99: nihil est quod festines, nisi ut valeas, id. Fam. 16, 6, 3: erat historia nihil aliud nisi annalium confectio, id. de Or. 2, 12, 52; id. Phil. 3, 5, 13, id. Rosc. Am. 37, 108.—2. Non aliter nisi, on no other condition: non aliter neque classem revocaturum neque exercitum reducturum, nisi, etc., Liv. 45, 11, 11.—3. Nisi si, except if, unless: nisi si etiam illuc pervenerint, Varr. R. R. 2, 9: noli putare me ad quemquam longiores epistulas scribere, nisi si qui ad me plura scripsit, etc., Cic. Fam. 14, 2, 1: nisi vero si quis est qui, id. Cat. 2, 4, 6. —4. Nisi ut, except that, unless: neque convivia inire ausus est, nisi ut speculatores cum lanceis circumstarent, Suet. Claud. 35. —5. Nisi quod, except that which, save only that: nam nunc homines nihili faciunt quod licet nisi quod lubet, Plaut. Trin. 4, 3, 25: cum Patrone Epicureo mihi omnia sunt communia, nisi quod in philosophiā vehementer ab eo dissentio, Cic. Fam. 13, 1, 2: praedia me valde delectant, nisi quod me aere circum foraneo obruerunt, id. Att. 2, 1, 11; id. Tusc. 3, 24, 58: ab negotiis numquam voluptas remorata est, nisi quod de uxore potuit honestius consuli, Sall. J. 95, 3; Tac. A. 14, 14: unde causa et origo peregrino sacro parum comperi, nisi quod signum ipsum ... docet advectam religionem, id. G. 9.—6. Nisi quia, except because, i. e. until that at nesciebam id dicere illam, nisi quia Correxit miles, quod intellexi minus, Ter. Eun. 4, 5, 10.—II. In transitions; also in the combinations nisi vero, nisi forte, nisi tamen, unless perhaps, etc., mostly ironical (cf. Gr. ei) mh\ a)/ra, ei mh/ ge, e)kto\s ei) mh/): nisi unum hoc faciam ut in puteo cenam coquant, Plaut. Aul. 2, 7, 3: nisi forte volumus Epicureorum opinionem sequi, qui, etc., Cic. Fat. 16, 37: nisi vero existimatis dementem Africanum fuisse, qui, etc., id. Mil. 3, 8: ne requiras; nisi forte adulescentes pueritiam debent requirere, id. Sen. 10, 33: Hostis nullus erat, nisi forte quem vos jussissetis, Sall. J. 14, 10; cf. Zumpt, Gram. 569.