-
1 Pomona
Pōmōna, ae, f. [pomum].I.The goddess of fruit and fruit-trees, Pomona, Varr. L. L. 7, § 45 Müll.; Ov. M. 14, 623; Serv. Verg. A. 7, 190; Arn. 3, p. 118.—B.Transf., fruit-trees, fruit (post-Aug.), Plin. 23 prooem. 1, §II.1: Thyle larga et diutina Pomona copiosa est,
Sol. 22 med. —Derivv.A.‡ Pōmōnal, ālis, n., the temple of Pomona, Fest. p. 250 Müll.—B.Pōmōnālis, e, adj., of or belonging to Pomona, Pomonal:flamen,
Varr. L. L. 7, § 45 Müll.; cf. Fest. s. v. maximae dignationis, pp. 154 and 155 Müll. -
2 Pōmōna
Pōmōna ae, f [pomum], the goddess of fruit and fruit-trees, Pomona, O. -
3 Pomona College
University: PC -
4 Leptospira pomona
f.Leptospira pomona, Leptospira interrogans serovar pomona. -
5 Catopsila pomona
Entomology: cassia butterfly (лат.) -
6 olla pomona
• boss -
7 leptospirosis pomona
f. s.&pl.swineherds' disease. -
8 Помона
-
9 помона
-
10 Pomonal
Pōmōna, ae, f. [pomum].I.The goddess of fruit and fruit-trees, Pomona, Varr. L. L. 7, § 45 Müll.; Ov. M. 14, 623; Serv. Verg. A. 7, 190; Arn. 3, p. 118.—B.Transf., fruit-trees, fruit (post-Aug.), Plin. 23 prooem. 1, §II.1: Thyle larga et diutina Pomona copiosa est,
Sol. 22 med. —Derivv.A.‡ Pōmōnal, ālis, n., the temple of Pomona, Fest. p. 250 Müll.—B.Pōmōnālis, e, adj., of or belonging to Pomona, Pomonal:flamen,
Varr. L. L. 7, § 45 Müll.; cf. Fest. s. v. maximae dignationis, pp. 154 and 155 Müll. -
11 Pomonalis
Pōmōna, ae, f. [pomum].I.The goddess of fruit and fruit-trees, Pomona, Varr. L. L. 7, § 45 Müll.; Ov. M. 14, 623; Serv. Verg. A. 7, 190; Arn. 3, p. 118.—B.Transf., fruit-trees, fruit (post-Aug.), Plin. 23 prooem. 1, §II.1: Thyle larga et diutina Pomona copiosa est,
Sol. 22 med. —Derivv.A.‡ Pōmōnal, ālis, n., the temple of Pomona, Fest. p. 250 Müll.—B.Pōmōnālis, e, adj., of or belonging to Pomona, Pomonal:flamen,
Varr. L. L. 7, § 45 Müll.; cf. Fest. s. v. maximae dignationis, pp. 154 and 155 Müll. -
12 حمى بومونا
Pomona fever -
13 Помона
1) Religion: Pomona (In the Roman religion, goddess of fruit) -
14 Flamen
1.flāmen (also ‡2.FILAMEN,
Inscr. Grut. 227, 6), mis, m. [same root with fla-gro, q. v.; lit., he who burns, sc. offerings, Corss. Ausspr. 1, 84, 146; cf. 2, 86 note; Momms. Röm. Gesch. 1, 155; and Curt. Gr. Etym. p. 301], a priest of one particular deity, a flamen (acc. to a false etym. of Varr. and Fest., v. infra, so called from the fillet which he wore around his head). Festus enumerates from the highest flamen, that of Jupiter, to the lowest, that of Pomona, fifteen of these priests;in the times of the emperors, the deified emperors and other deified persons also had their separate flamens assigned to them: flamines, quod in Latio capite velato erant semper, ac caput cinctum habebant filo, flamines dicti. Horum singuli cognomina habent ab eo deo, quoi sacra faciunt,
Varr. L. L. 5, § 84 Müll.: flamen Dialis dictus, quod filo assidue velatur, indeque appellatur flamen, quasi filamen, Paul. ex Fest. p. 87, 15 Müll.; cf. also Serv. Verg. A. 8, 664:maximae dignationis Flamen Dialis est inter quindecim flamines, et cum ceteri discrimina majestatis suae habeant, minimi habetur Pomonalis, quod Pomona levissimo fructui agrorum praesidit pomis,
Fest. p. 154, 27 sq.; cf.Müll. Comm. ad h. l. p. 385, b: DIVIS ALIIS ALII SACERDOTES, OMNIBVS PONTIFICES, SINGVLIS FLAMINES SVNTO,
Cic. Leg. 2, 8, 20:(Numa) flaminem Jovi assiduum sacerdotem creavit... huic duos flamines adjecit, Marti unum, alterum Quirino,
Liv. 1, 20, 2; cf. Cic. Rep. 2, 14; Aug. Civ. D. 2, 15; cf.also: est ergo flamen, ut Jovi, ut Marti, ut Quirino, sic divo Julio M. Antonius, etc.,
Cic. Phil. 2, 43, 110:Tiberius flamines sibi decerni prohibuit,
Suet. Tib. 26; v. Gell. 10, 15:FLAMEN D. AVGVSTI,
Inscr. Orell. 311; 488; cf.AVGVSTALIS,
ib. 643; 2366:DIVI CLAVDII,
ib. 2218; 3651:PERPETVVS NERONIS AVG.,
ib. 2219:SALVTIS AVGVSTAE,
ib. 1171:ROMAE,
ib. 2183:flaminem prodere,
Cic. Mil. 10, 27:inaugurare flaminem,
Liv. 27, 8, 4.flāmen, ĭnis, n. [flo], = pneuma, a blowing, blast, esp. of wind ( poet., most freq. in the plur.; cf.: ventus, flatus, flabra, spiritus, aura).I.Lit.:II.cur Berecynthiae Cessant flamina tibiae?
Hor. C. 3, 19, 19; Nemes. Ecl. 1, 16: aquilo suo cum flamine, Enn. ap. Macr. S. 6, 2 (Ann. v. 424 ed. Vahl.):Borea, surdas flamine tunde fores,
Ov. Am. 1, 6, 54:venti,
Lucr. 1, 290:Cauri,
id. 6, 135; cf. Verg. A. 10, 97.—Transf., concr., a gale, breeze, wind:3.ferunt sua flamina classem,
Verg. A. 5, 832; Ov. F. 3, 599:flamina conticuere, jacet sine fluctibus aequor,
Val. Fl. 3, 732.Flāmen, ĭnis, m., a surname in the gens Claudia, Liv. 27, 21, 5. -
15 flamen
1.flāmen (also ‡2.FILAMEN,
Inscr. Grut. 227, 6), mis, m. [same root with fla-gro, q. v.; lit., he who burns, sc. offerings, Corss. Ausspr. 1, 84, 146; cf. 2, 86 note; Momms. Röm. Gesch. 1, 155; and Curt. Gr. Etym. p. 301], a priest of one particular deity, a flamen (acc. to a false etym. of Varr. and Fest., v. infra, so called from the fillet which he wore around his head). Festus enumerates from the highest flamen, that of Jupiter, to the lowest, that of Pomona, fifteen of these priests;in the times of the emperors, the deified emperors and other deified persons also had their separate flamens assigned to them: flamines, quod in Latio capite velato erant semper, ac caput cinctum habebant filo, flamines dicti. Horum singuli cognomina habent ab eo deo, quoi sacra faciunt,
Varr. L. L. 5, § 84 Müll.: flamen Dialis dictus, quod filo assidue velatur, indeque appellatur flamen, quasi filamen, Paul. ex Fest. p. 87, 15 Müll.; cf. also Serv. Verg. A. 8, 664:maximae dignationis Flamen Dialis est inter quindecim flamines, et cum ceteri discrimina majestatis suae habeant, minimi habetur Pomonalis, quod Pomona levissimo fructui agrorum praesidit pomis,
Fest. p. 154, 27 sq.; cf.Müll. Comm. ad h. l. p. 385, b: DIVIS ALIIS ALII SACERDOTES, OMNIBVS PONTIFICES, SINGVLIS FLAMINES SVNTO,
Cic. Leg. 2, 8, 20:(Numa) flaminem Jovi assiduum sacerdotem creavit... huic duos flamines adjecit, Marti unum, alterum Quirino,
Liv. 1, 20, 2; cf. Cic. Rep. 2, 14; Aug. Civ. D. 2, 15; cf.also: est ergo flamen, ut Jovi, ut Marti, ut Quirino, sic divo Julio M. Antonius, etc.,
Cic. Phil. 2, 43, 110:Tiberius flamines sibi decerni prohibuit,
Suet. Tib. 26; v. Gell. 10, 15:FLAMEN D. AVGVSTI,
Inscr. Orell. 311; 488; cf.AVGVSTALIS,
ib. 643; 2366:DIVI CLAVDII,
ib. 2218; 3651:PERPETVVS NERONIS AVG.,
ib. 2219:SALVTIS AVGVSTAE,
ib. 1171:ROMAE,
ib. 2183:flaminem prodere,
Cic. Mil. 10, 27:inaugurare flaminem,
Liv. 27, 8, 4.flāmen, ĭnis, n. [flo], = pneuma, a blowing, blast, esp. of wind ( poet., most freq. in the plur.; cf.: ventus, flatus, flabra, spiritus, aura).I.Lit.:II.cur Berecynthiae Cessant flamina tibiae?
Hor. C. 3, 19, 19; Nemes. Ecl. 1, 16: aquilo suo cum flamine, Enn. ap. Macr. S. 6, 2 (Ann. v. 424 ed. Vahl.):Borea, surdas flamine tunde fores,
Ov. Am. 1, 6, 54:venti,
Lucr. 1, 290:Cauri,
id. 6, 135; cf. Verg. A. 10, 97.—Transf., concr., a gale, breeze, wind:3.ferunt sua flamina classem,
Verg. A. 5, 832; Ov. F. 3, 599:flamina conticuere, jacet sine fluctibus aequor,
Val. Fl. 3, 732.Flāmen, ĭnis, m., a surname in the gens Claudia, Liv. 27, 21, 5. -
16 (о.) Помона
Geography: Pomona -
17 cassia butterfly
Entomology: Catopsila pomona -
18 богиня плодовых деревьев
Religion: PomonaУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > богиня плодовых деревьев
-
19 Pomone
Pomone npr Pomona. -
20 सीता
sītāf. (less correctly written ṡītā;
cf. sīmán, sīra) a furrow, the track orᅠ line of a ploughshare ( alsoᅠ personified, andᅠ apparently once worshipped as a kind of goddess resembling Pomona;
in RV. IV, 57, 6, Sitā is invoked as presiding over agriculture orᅠ the fruits of the earth;
in VS. XII, 69-72, Sitā, the Furrow is again personified andᅠ addressed, four furrows being required to be drawn at the ceremony when the above stanzas are recited;
in TBr. she is called sāvitrī, andᅠ in PārGṛ. indra-patnī, « the wife of Indra» ;
in epic poetry Sitā is the wife of Rāmacandra andᅠ daughter of Janaka, king of Mithilā, capital of Videha, who was otherwise called Sīradhvaja;
she was named Sitā because fabled to have sprung from a furrow made by Janaka while ploughing the ground to prepare it for a sacrifice instituted by him to obtain progeny, whence her epithet Ayoni-jā, « not womb-born» ;
her other common names, Maithilī andᅠ Vaidehī, are from the place of her birth;
according to one legend she was Vedavatī q.v., in the Kṛita age;
accord. toᅠ others she was an incarnation of Lakshmi andᅠ of Umā;
the story of Rāma's bending the bow, which was to be the condition of the gift of Sitā, is told in R. I, 67 ;
Sītā's younger sister Urmilā was at the same time given to Lakshmaṇa, andᅠ two nieces of Janaka, daughters of his brother king Kusa-dhvaja, to Bharata andᅠ Ṡatrughna)
RV. etc.. etc.. IW. 335 n. 1; 337 etc.. ;
N. of a form of Dākshāyaṇī Cat. ;
of a poetess Cat. ;
of a river MBh. R. etc.;
of the eastern branch of the four mythical branches of the heavenly Ganges (into which it is supposed to divide after falling on mount Meru;
this branch is fabled to flow into the Varsha orᅠ Dvīpa called Bhadrâva) L. ;
of an Upanishad. Cat. ;
spirituous liquor W. ;
- सीताकल्यान
- सीताकुण्ड
- सीतागोप्तृ
- सीतागौरीव्रत
- सीताचरणचामर
- सीताजानि
- सीतातीर्थमाहात्म्य
- सीतादिव्यचरित्र
- सीताद्रव्य
- सीतानदी
- सीतानन्द
- सीतानवमीव्रतमाहात्म्य
- सीतापति
- सीताफल
- सीतायज्ञ
- सीताराघवनाटक
- सीताराम
- सीतालोष्ट
- सीतालोष्ठ
- सीतावन
- सीतावल्लभ
- सीताविजयचम्पू
- सीताविवाह
- सीताश्रुति
- सीताष्टोत्तरशतनामावलि
- सीतासहस्रनामन्
- सीतासहस्रनामस्तोत्र
- सीतास्तव
- सीतास्तुति
- सीतास्तोत्र
- सीतास्वयंवर
- सीताहरण
- सीताहार
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
Pomona — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Para otros usos de este término, véase Pomona (desambiguación). Pomona, Pontormo, Villa Medicis de Poggio, Caiano Pomona era, en la mitología romana, la diosa de la fruta, y por exte … Wikipedia Español
Pomona — (Nicolas Fouché, um 1700) … Deutsch Wikipedia
Pomona — Pomona, NJ U.S. Census Designated Place in New Jersey Population (2000): 4019 Housing Units (2000): 1357 Land area (2000): 2.796036 sq. miles (7.241700 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 2.796036 sq … StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places
Pomoná — ist eine kleine Ruinenstätte der Maya im mexikanischen Bundesstaat Tabasco, rund 16,5 Kilometer westlich der Kleinstadt Tenosique im Bereich des Río Usumacinta. Die ersten intensiveren Untersuchungen erfolgten nach 1960 durch Heinrich Berlin … Deutsch Wikipedia
Pomona, CA — U.S. city in California Population (2000): 149473 Housing Units (2000): 39598 Land area (2000): 22.840225 sq. miles (59.155909 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 22.840225 sq. miles (59.155909 sq.… … StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places
Pomona, KS — U.S. city in Kansas Population (2000): 923 Housing Units (2000): 380 Land area (2000): 0.756028 sq. miles (1.958103 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 0.756028 sq. miles (1.958103 sq. km) FIPS code … StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places
Pomona, NJ — U.S. Census Designated Place in New Jersey Population (2000): 4019 Housing Units (2000): 1357 Land area (2000): 2.796036 sq. miles (7.241700 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 2.796036 sq. miles… … StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places
Pomona, NY — U.S. village in New York Population (2000): 2726 Housing Units (2000): 925 Land area (2000): 2.427436 sq. miles (6.287031 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 2.427436 sq. miles (6.287031 sq. km) FIPS … StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places
Pomōna [1] — Pomōna, 1) die römische Göttin des Gartenbaues, bes. der Baumfrüchte. Dem Priapos u. den Satyrn verschloß sie ihren Garten; ihr Geliebter Vertumnus überlistete sie als altes Weib, worauf er sich als schöner Jüngling zeigte. In Rom hatte sie ihren … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Pomóna — POMÓNA, æ, eine Hamadryas, welche ihr Vergnügen am Gartenbaue, und Erziehung guter und fruchtbarer Bäume hatte, hierbey aber weder die Liebeshändel, noch sonst etwas achtete. Indessen stelleten ihr doch Priapus, die Satyren und andere Feldgötter… … Gründliches mythologisches Lexikon
Pomona — {{Pomona}} Römische Göttin des Obst (poma) und Gartenbaus, nach Ovid von Vertumnus* zur Frau gewonnen (Metamorphosen XIV 622–771). Mit Ceres* zusammen sieht man Pomona auf einem Gemälde von Peter Paul Rubens (um 1625, Madrid, Prado), mit… … Who's who in der antiken Mythologie