| LAMBERE | To lick (lit. and metaph.) |
| SCANDERE | To climb and ascend, lit. and metaph.: eg paulatimque gradus aetatis ____ adultae, DRN 2.1123 |
| ATRAE | Dark nights (lit. and metaph.): noctes ____ |
| LUCTANTUR | They wrestle (dep. verb both lit. and metaph.) |
| IGNIS | Fire, lit. and metaph. |
| UNDIQUE | From every side, everywhere, all round (lit. and metaph.) |
| CINGERE | Lit. to surround and metaph. to crown, girdle |
| ARSI | I burned, lit. and esp. metaph. (scilicet, in amore) |
| EVEXIT | Lit., he carried off, and metaph., he raised up, exported |
| ALAE | Wings, lit. and, as English, metaph. 1st decl. f. nom. |
| ROBORA | Hard woods, esp. oak and metaph. strengths, nom., acc. pl |
| INIRE | Lit. to enter, metaph. somnum ____, to go to the Land of Nod |
| ONION | Bulb lit and lit again, one screwed in (5) |
| PROSPICIT | She looks forward and looks after, lit. and fig. |
| SCOPULI | Cliffs and crags, and so metaph. Cicero's difficulties |
| IUGUM | Lit. yoke, collar and so metaph. bond of marriage |
| SECUNDUMARTEM | Lit. according to art, metaph. in English now, scientifically |
| MORI | Morior, ____, mortuum: 3rd dep. to die (lit.), end (metaph.) |
| CANDLE | What can be lit - and left in church? |
| COOL | Hip, lit and woke |