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Definition 2025
posco
posco
Latin
Verb
poscō or pōscō (present infinitive poscere or pōscere, perfect active poposcī or popōscī); third conjugation, no passive
- I beg, I demand, I request, I desire.
- Poscor aliquid. ― Something is asked of me.
- Poscor meum Laelapa. ― They demand of me my Laelaps.
- I demand for punishment, I ask the surrender of.
- I call someone.
- c. 254 BCE – 184 BCE, Plautus, Curculio 5.3.5
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Argentariis male credi qui aiunt, nugas praedicant: nam et bene et male credi dico; id adeo ego hodie expertus sum. Non male creditur qui numquam reddunt, sed prorsum perit. Vel ille, decem minas dum solvit, omnis mensas transiit. Postquam nil fit, clamore hominem posco: ille in ius me vocat; pessume metui, ne mihi hodie apud praetorem solveret. Verum amici compulerunt: reddit argentum domo. Nunc domum properare certumst.[1]
- People that say bankers are ill trusted talk rubbish. Why, they are well and ill trusted both, I tell you–and what is more, I have proved it myself this very day. Money is not ill trusted to men that never repay you; it is gone for good. That Lyco, for example, in trying to raise forty pounds for me, went to every single bank. Nothing coming of it, I begin dunning him at the top of my lungs. He summons me before the magistrate I was horribly afraid he would settle with me in court. But his friends coerced him, and he paid me out of his own cash in hand. Now I must hurry home.[2]
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Argentariis male credi qui aiunt, nugas praedicant: nam et bene et male credi dico; id adeo ego hodie expertus sum. Non male creditur qui numquam reddunt, sed prorsum perit. Vel ille, decem minas dum solvit, omnis mensas transiit. Postquam nil fit, clamore hominem posco: ille in ius me vocat; pessume metui, ne mihi hodie apud praetorem solveret. Verum amici compulerunt: reddit argentum domo. Nunc domum properare certumst.[1]
- Ego poscor Olympo! ― It is I that Olympus summons!
- Ad te confugio et supplex tua numina posco. ― To you I have recourse and, as a suppliant, I call on your divine power.
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- I ask in marriage, I demand one's hand.
- Filiam tuam mihi uxorem posco. ― I demand your daughters hand in marriage.
Inflection
With short o:
With long o:
Usage notes
Though it is listed without passive forms, they do sometimes appear, as in Seneca's Thyestes, 242-43: "Tantalum et Pelopem aspice; / ad haec manus exempla poscuntur meae."
Synonyms
References
- posco in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- posco in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
- Félix Gaffiot (1934), “posco”, in Dictionnaire Illustré Latin-Français, Paris: Hachette.
- Meissner, Carl; Auden, Henry William (1894) Latin Phrase-Book, London: Macmillan and Co.
- to get a question submitted to one: quaestionem poscere (Fin. 2. 1. 1)
- to get a question submitted to one: quaestionem poscere (Fin. 2. 1. 1)