Latin

edit

Etymology

edit

    From con- (with) +‎ statuō (set up; establish).

    Pronunciation

    edit

    Verb

    edit

    cōnstituō (present infinitive cōnstituere, perfect active cōnstituī, supine cōnstitūtum); third conjugation

    1. to place, put, locate, lay
      Synonyms: ponō, colloco, loco, statuo, sisto, figo, struō, impono, defigo
    2. to set up, establish, constitute, found
    3. to build, erect, construct
      Synonyms: aedificō, exaedificō, inaedificō, struō, cōnstruō, condō, compōnō, fundō, statuō, exstruō, mōlior
    4. (military) to line up, deploy, order
    5. to deliberate, decide, resolve
      Synonyms: statuō, dēcernō, placet
    6. to nominate, appoint, elect
      Synonyms: designo, assigno, demando, mando, delego, lego, discribo, ordino, addico
      (Can we add an example for this sense?)

    Conjugation

    edit

    Derived terms

    edit
    edit

    Descendants

    edit

    References

    edit
    • constituo in Enrico Olivetti, editor (2003-2024), Dizionario Latino, Olivetti Media Communication
    • constituo”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
    • constituo”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
    • constituo in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
    • Carl Meißner, Henry William Auden (1894) Latin Phrase-Book[1], London: Macmillan and Co.
      • to finish, complete, fulfil, accomplish a thing: finem imponere, afferre, constituere alicui rei
      • to set up a statue in some one's honour: statuam alicui ponere, constituere
      • to determine the nature and constitution of the subject under discussion: constituere, quid et quale sit, de quo disputetur
      • to set a limit to a thing: modum facere, statuere, constituere alicui rei or alicuius rei
      • to impose fixed limitations: fines certos terminosque constituere
      • to take up one's abode in a place, settle down somewhere: sedem ac domicilium (fortunas suas) constituere alicubi
      • to fix a price for a thing: pretium alicui rei statuere, constituere (Att. 13. 22)
      • to build, found a city: oppidum constituere, condere
      • to give the state a constitution: rem publicam constituere
      • to make laws (of a legislator): leges scribere, facere, condere, constituere (not dare)
      • to establish some one as king, tyrant: aliquem regem, tyrannum constituere
      • to found a colony: coloniam constituere (Leg. Agr. 1. 5. 16)
      • to ordain as punishment that..: hanc poenam constituere in aliquem, ut...
      • to decree the penalty of death: supplicium alicui decernere, in aliquem constituere
      • to fix a day for the engagement: diem pugnae constituere (B. G. 3. 24)
      • to draw up forces in battle-order: aciem (copias, exercitum) instruere or in acie constituere
      • to make fast boats to anchors: naves (classem) constituere (in alto)

    Portuguese

    edit

    Verb

    edit

    constituo

    1. first-person singular present indicative of constituir
      NODES
    Note 1