The corpus record — Latin
Teir
Teir
Generated live from the audited Latin corpus — every figure on this page is a database query, not prose from memory.
Where it lives
- Oedipus 1 · 1.69/10k
What it meant
This reads as a proper name — a river, a person, a place — held only because the corpus attests it. It stands outside the library's subject, the vocabulary of the soul, so no lexicon entry is recorded.
In the wild
- Teir Seneca, Oedipus 1
Where it came from
- Treated in Ernout-Meillet, Dictionnaire etymologique de la langue latine s.v. teir (scan p. 812; entry #15787).
- Treated in Walde-Hofmann, Lateinisches etymologisches Worterbuch s.v. teir (scan p. 1895; entry #4263).
Downloads
Word record (JSON)·Concordance (CSV)·Frequencies (CSV)·Cite (BibTeX)
CC BY 4.0 with receipt attribution — every file carries its license line. What is exportable
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.