〈applico〉 ‘to move into conjunction’
〈synafa〉 ‘movement into conjunction’
〈admoveo〉 ‘to bring into conjunction’
Latin verb
Last edited: 2024-11-11| Primary meaning | to move into conjunction |
|---|---|
| Literal translation | to approach |
| Variants | appropinquo |
| Edited by |
Quibusdam antiquorum haec placet ratio. Cum ex stellis errantibus altera se alteri applicuit, confuso in unum duarum lumine facies longioris sideris redditur; nec hoc tunc tantum evenit, cum stella stellam attigit, sed etiam cum appropinquavit; intervallum enim quod inter duas est illustratur ab utraque inflammaturque et longum ignem efficit.
‘Some of the ancient scholars favour this explanation: when one of the planets has come into conjunction with another the light of both blends into one and presents the appearance of an elongated star. This happens not only when planet touches planet but even when they only come close. For the space between the two planets lights up and is set aflame by both planets and produces a train of fire.’
〈applico〉 ‘to move into conjunction’
〈synafa〉 ‘movement into conjunction’
〈admoveo〉 ‘to bring into conjunction’
@misc{zodiac1881,
note = {[Online; accessed 2025-12-01]},
author = {Meinhardt, Kierán},
year = {2024},
title = {appropinquo ({Lemma} #1881)},
url = {https://zodiacglossary.github.io/lemma/1881/},
howpublished = {https://zodiacglossary.github.io/lemma/1881/},
}