- socially; that is, to one's re****tion. A
person who
suffered infamia was an
infamis (plural infames).
Infamia was a form of
censure more
disgraceful than ignominia...
-
superstitious female relatives concoct a
charm with the "infamous finger" (digitus
infamis) and "purifying spit"
while in the Satyricon, an old
woman uses dust, spit...
- of
exile sentence. A
noble who has been
sentenced to infamy,
known as
infamis, lost the
protection of the law and
there was a
reward for his
death (similar...
-
Baeonoma infamis is a moth in the
family Depressariidae. It was
described by
Edward Meyrick in 1925. It is
found in Brazil. The
wingspan is 19–22 mm....
-
described in
English by
terms such as "rats" or "snitches" and in
Italian as
infami or pentiti,
depending on the context.
According to the
Oxford English Dictionary...
- he had **** with a prostitute, slave, or
person of
marginalized status (
infamis). Most
prostitutes in
ancient Rome were slaves,
though some
slaves were...
-
subject to execution, a rare
penalty in
Roman law. A male
classified as
infamis, such as a
prostitute or actor,
could not as a
matter of law be raped,...
- even a man who was "disre****ble and questionable" (famosus,
related to
infamis, and su****iosus) had the same
right as
other free men not to have his...
-
socially acceptable, as long as his
partner was a male prostitute,
slave or
infamis, a
person excluded from the
legal protections accorded a citizen. In the...
-
liberty (libertas), as
distinguished from the
slave or
social outcast (
infamis).
Although nexum was
abolished as a way to
secure a loan, a form of debt...