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298 :incendō, incendere, incendī, incēnsus, set fire to, burn (incendiary). Cf. cremō
 * obtineō, obtinēre, obtinuī, obtentus, possess, occupy, hold (obtain)
 * perveniō, pervenīre, pervēnī, perventus, come through, arrive

LESSON LIX, §337

 * agmen, agminis, n., line of march, column; prīmum agmen, the van; novissimum agmen, the rear
 * atque, ac, conj., and; atque is used before vowels and consonants, ac before consonants only. Cf. et and -que
 * concilium, conci'lī, n., council, assembly
 * Helvētiī, -ōrum, m., the Helvetii, a Gallic tribe
 * passus, passūs, m., a pace, five Roman feet; mīlle passuum, a thousand (of) paces, a Roman mile
 * quā dē causā, for this reason, for what reason
 * vāllum, -ī, n., earthworks, rampart
 * cadō, cadere, cecidī, cāsūrus, fall (decadence)
 * dēdō, dēdere, dēdidī, dēditus, surrender, give up; with a reflexive pronoun, surrender one's self, submit, with the dative of the indirect object
 * premō, premere, pressī, pressus, press hard, harass
 * vexō, vexāre, vexāvī, vexātus, annoy, ravage (vex)

LESSON LX, §341

 * aut, conj., or; aut … aut, either … or
 * causā, abl. of causa, for the sake of, because of. Always stands after the gen. which modifies it
 * ferē, adv., nearly, almost
 * opīniō, -ōnis, f., opinion, supposition, expectation
 * rēs frūmentāria, reī frūmentāriae, f. (lit. the grain affair), grain supply
 * timor, -ōris, m., fear. Cf. timeō
 * undique, adv., from all sides
 * cōnor, cōnārī, cōnātus sum, attempt, try
 * ēgredior, ēgredī, ēgressus sum, move out, disembark; prōgredior, move forward, advance (egress, progress)
 * moror, morārī, morātus sum, delay
 * orior, orīrī, ortus sum, arise, spring; begin; be born (from) (origin)
 * proficīscor, proficīscī, profectus sum, set out
 * revertor, revertī, reversus sum, return (revert). The forms of this verb are usually active, and not deponent, in the perfect system. Perf. act., revertī
 * sequor, sequī, secūtus sum, follow (sequence). Note the following compounds of sequor and the force of the different prefixes: cōnsequor (follow with), overtake; īnsequor (follow against), pursue; subsequor (follow under), follow close after