praetereā [praeter + is], adv., in addition to this, besides, moreover.
praetereō, see [(1) eō].
praeteritus [orig. part. of praetereō], adj., past.
[praetextus] [orig. part. of praetexō, to edge, border], adj., bordered, edged. As noun, praetexta, ae (sc. toga), f., the toga praetexta, or white toga with purple border, worn by magistrates and by free-born children till the sixteenth or seventeenth year, when they became of age and assumed the toga virīlis, which was wholly white.
praetor, ōris [orig. praeitor, from prae + (1) eō], m., a leader, commander; among the Romans, a praetor or magistrate, whose especial business was the administration of justice. After Sulla’s time eight or more were elected annually. The praetors often served in command of armies, esp. in the provinces, and after acting as judges in Rome, were regularly assigned to duty in the provinces with the title of prōpraetor.
praetōrius [praetor], adj., of or belonging to the general, the general’s; praetorian. As noun, praetōrius, ī, m., a man of praetorian rank, an ex-praetor.
praeveniō, see [veniō].
prandium, ī, n., lunch.
prātum, ī, n., a field, meadow.
prāvus, adj., crooked, wrong; perverse, wicked.