Meaning of 'Ultorem' in English | Latin to English
🗣️ Translation & Context: Looking for the English meaning or translation of the Latin word 'Ultorem'? Memorizing flat dictionary definitions is slow. Read the Latin to English examples below, check your pronunciation, and play the interactive games to master it instantly.
🚀 Key Takeaways & Fast Facts
- Dictionary Entry: Essential usages of 'Ultorem'.
- Verified Footprint: 472 active tokens in this module.
- Study Commitment: Approximately 3 minutes of required focus.
- Difficulty Range: Adaptive (C1 Advanced).
- Interactive Assets: Native TTS Audio, Quizzes, and Gamification enabled.
🪞 Lip Sync Mirror
Watch your mouth shape while saying
"Nec tacui demens, et me, fors si qua tulisset, / si patrios umquam remeassem victor ad Argos, / promisi ultorem, et verbis odia aspera movi. / Hinc mihi prima mali labes; hinc semper Ulixes / criminibus terrere novis, hinc spargere voces / in vulgum ambiguas, et quærere conscius arma. / Nec requievit enim, donec Calchante ministro..."
📍 GPS Navigation Script
I wanted to reach out and formally discuss Nec tacui demens, et me, fors si qua tulisset, / si patrios umquam remeassem victor ad Argos, / promisi ultorem, et verbis odia aspera movi. / Hinc mihi prima mali labes; hinc semper Ulixes / criminibus terrere novis, hinc spargere voces / in vulgum ambiguas, et quærere conscius arma. / Nec requievit enim, donec Calchante ministro... to ensure our teams are aligned moving forward.
Best regards,
Language Learner
🗺️ Dialect Geography
Nec tacui demens, et me, fors si qua tulisset, / si patrios umquam remeassem victor ad Argos, / promisi ultorem, et verbis odia aspera movi. / Hinc mihi prima mali labes; hinc semper Ulixes / criminibus terrere novis, hinc spargere voces / in vulgum ambiguas, et quærere conscius arma. / Nec requievit enim, donec Calchante ministro...
Nec tacui demens, et me, fors si qua tulisset, / si patrios umquam remeassem victor ad Argos, / promisi ultorem, et verbis odia aspera movi. / Hinc mihi prima mali labes; hinc semper Ulixes / criminibus terrere novis, hinc spargere voces / in vulgum ambiguas, et quærere conscius arma. / Nec requievit enim, donec Calchante ministro...
Nec tacui demens, et me, fors si qua tulisset, / si patrios umquam remeassem victor ad Argos, / promisi ultorem, et verbis odia aspera movi. / Hinc mihi prima mali labes; hinc semper Ulixes / criminibus terrere novis, hinc spargere voces / in vulgum ambiguas, et quærere conscius arma. / Nec requievit enim, donec Calchante ministro...
🖱️ Interactive Definition
🦯 Tactile Mapping
Simulated unicode structural mapping for braille displays.
🎉 Celebration Trigger
Test your interactive event listeners.
📞 Tele-Prompt Script
Read this if you have to call customer service.
Mastery Unlocked
"Nec tacui demens, et me, fors si qua tulisset, / si patrios umquam remeassem victor ad Argos, / promisi ultorem, et verbis odia aspera movi. / Hinc mihi prima mali labes; hinc semper Ulixes / criminibus terrere novis, hinc spargere voces / in vulgum ambiguas, et quærere conscius arma. / Nec requievit enim, donec Calchante ministro..."
🃏 Memory Card
Click the card to instantly switch the language.
📚 Core Dictionary Examples
🧠 Academic Quizzes
Evaluate your retention with these dynamically selected testing modules.
🕹️ Extra Memory Games
Dynamically generated interactive challenges to test your recall today.
💡 People Also Ask
How do you say "Nor in my madness kept my purpose low, / but vowed, if e'er should happier chance invite, / and bring me home a conqueror, even so / my comrade's death with vengeance to requite. / My words aroused his wrath; thence evil's earliest blight. / Thenceforth Ulysses sought with slanderous tongue / to daunt me, scattering in the people's ear / dark hints, and looked for partners of his wrong; / nor rested, till with Calchas' aid, the seer..." in English?
The most natural translation is "Nec tacui demens, et me, fors si qua tulisset, / si patrios umquam remeassem victor ad Argos, / promisi ultorem, et verbis odia aspera movi. / Hinc mihi prima mali labes; hinc semper Ulixes / criminibus terrere novis, hinc spargere voces / in vulgum ambiguas, et quærere conscius arma. / Nec requievit enim, donec Calchante ministro...".