de intro

Latin

Etymology

From +‎ intrō.

Adverb

dē intrō (not comparable) (Late Latin)

  1. from within
    • 4th c. C.E., Chiron Centaurus, Mulomedicina Chironis, 135[1]:
      auferes [] sanguinem [] et de prioribus pedibus iuxta ungulam partes in apparenti venenata vena deintro, et foris lavare calida
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)

Descendants

References

  1. ^ Eugen Oder, editor (1901), Claudii Hermeri Mulomedicina Chironis, Leipzig: B. G. Teubner, page 42, lines 27–30