Repente; Subito; Extemplo; E vestigio; Illico;Statim; Protinus; Confestim; Continuo
Repente; Subito; Extemplo; E vestigio; Illico; Statim; Protinus; Confestim; Continuo. Repente and subito denote suddenly; repens means sudden, in opp. to exspectatus, expected, Cic. Tusc. iii. 22; to sensim, Cic. Off. i. 33. Suet. Tib. 11, like ἐξαπίνης; but subitus, in opp. to foreseen, ante provisus, Cic. Tusc. iii. 22; meditatus, Plin. Ep. i. 16; paratus, Cic. Or. i. 33, like παραχρῆμα. Extemplo and e vestigio, in opp. to delay; extemplo (ex tempore) in a moment, with reference to time; e vestigio, on the spot, sur-le-champ, with reference to place. Illico and ilicet, in opp. to slowness; illico (in loco) is used in prose, like παραυτίκα; ilicet, by writers of comedy and poets. Statim and protinus, in opp. to, at a future time; statim, immediately, in opp. to deinde, Tac. Ann. vi. 3; postea, Suet. Cl. 39. A. 51. N. 34, like εὐθύς; protinus, <a class="pagenum" id="page183" name="page183">183</a> forthwith, like <ins class="correction greek" lang="el" title="accent missing">πρόκα</ins>. Confestim and continuo, in opp. to ex intervallo, Cic. Inv. ii. 12. (v. 157.)