LOGOI

The corpus record — Latin

taedium

taedium · n

weariness

Generated live from the audited Latin corpus — every figure on this page is a database query, not prose from memory.

Where it lives

  • Vitellius 2 · 8.31/10k
  • De Tranquillitate Animi 5 · 6.62/10k
  • In Eutropium 3 · 4.18/10k
  • C. Caligula 3 · 3.93/10k
  • Remedia Amoris 2 · 3.81/10k
  • Carus et Carinus et Numerianus 1 · 3.77/10k
  • Adversus Valentinianos 2 · 3.14/10k
  • Divus Claudius 2 · 3.13/10k
  • Divus Vespasianus 1 · 3.13/10k
  • Ab urbe condita, books 1-5 - 5 5 · 3.11/10k
  • De Pallio 1 · 2.92/10k
  • Nero 2 · 2.56/10k

Densest 12 of 80 attested works shown, by occurrences per 10,000 attested tokens.

What it meant

taedĭum — Lewis & Short

taedĭum, ii, n.taedet,

I weariness, irksomeness, tediousness; loathing, disgust (not freq. till after the Aug. period; perh. not at all in Cic. or Cæs.).
I Subject.
(a) With gen.: rerum adversarum, Sall. J. 62, 9: belli, Liv. 8, 2, 2: confectus taedio puellae, Auct. B. Alex. 23: taedio curarum fessus, Tac. A. 12, 39: taedium movere sui, id. ib. 13, 2: laboris, Quint. 2, 2, 6; 12, 3, 11: lucis, id. 1, 3, 16: capere taedium vitae, Gell. 7, 18, 11: educationis taedium suscipere libenter, Plin. Ep. 1, 8, 11.—In plur., Verg. G. 4, 332: longi belli, Ov. M. 13, 213: coepti mei, id. ib. 9, 615: tui, id. A. A. 1, 718.—
(b) Absol.: cum oppugnatio obsidentibus prius saepe quam obsessis taedium afferat, Liv. 34, 34, 2; so, afferre, Quint. 5, 12, 8: evitare, id. 10, 1, 31: cum virtutes etiam ipsae taedium pariant, nisi, etc., id. 9, 4, 43: supervacua cum taedio dicuntur, id. 4, 2, 44: esse taedio alicui, Plin. Ep. 8, 18, 8: sollicitum taedium, Hor. C. 1, 14, 17: ne te capiant taedia, Tib. 1, 4, 16: taedium facere, Plin. 31, 3, 21, § 34: taedio aliquem afficere, Tac. A. 6, 7: taedia subeunt animos, Juv. 7, 34.—
II Transf., object., loathsomeness, a disgusting, loathsome, or irksome thing, a nuisance (Plinian): vetustas oleo taedium affert, a loathsome, rancid taste, smell, etc., Plin. 15, 2, 3, § 7; 19, 6, 34, § 111; 29, 6, 39, § 141.—In plur.: non sunt ea taedia (sc. muscae et culices) in metallis, Plin. 34, 18, 50, § 167.

In the wild

6 of 256 attestations shown.

Where it came from

No etymology authority pointer is recorded for this lemma yet — an honest gap, not an omission.

Latin text and lemmatization derived from the Perseus Digital Library (canonical-latinLit), CC BY-SA 4.0. Lewis & Short (public domain) via Perseus. This derived data is shared under the same CC BY-SA 4.0 license.