lēvir

ĭri, m.

for dēvir, kindred with Sanscr. dēvar, whence juvān = juvenis; Gr. δαήρ

I. a husband's brother, brother-inlaw: viri frater levir est: apud Graecos δαὴρ appellatur, Dig. 38, 10, 4, § 6: levir dicitur frater mariti, quasi laevus vir, Non. 557, 8: levir est uxori meae frater meus (i. e. my brother is levir to my wife), Paul. ex Fest. p. 115 Müll. N. cr.
Lewis & Short
A Latin Dictionary, 1879
An open-access project