-
1 Fronto
1.fronto, ōnis, m. amplif. [2. frons], one who has a broad forehead:2.ecquos naevum habere? ecquos silos, flaccos, frontones, capitones?
Cic. N. D. 1, 29, 80.—Hence,Fronto, ōnis, m., a proper name. So esp.: M. Cornelius Fronto, a famous Roman orator from Cirta, in Numidia, who lived about A. D. 90-168. Small portions of his writings have been discovered in palimpsests by Angelo Mai. —II.Deriv. Frontōnĭānus, a, um, adj., of Fronto, Frontonian:decreta,
Dig. 29, 2, 99.— Subst.: Frontōnĭāni, ōrum, m., pupils of Fronto, Frontonians, Sid. Ep. 1, 1. -
2 fronto
1.fronto, ōnis, m. amplif. [2. frons], one who has a broad forehead:2.ecquos naevum habere? ecquos silos, flaccos, frontones, capitones?
Cic. N. D. 1, 29, 80.—Hence,Fronto, ōnis, m., a proper name. So esp.: M. Cornelius Fronto, a famous Roman orator from Cirta, in Numidia, who lived about A. D. 90-168. Small portions of his writings have been discovered in palimpsests by Angelo Mai. —II.Deriv. Frontōnĭānus, a, um, adj., of Fronto, Frontonian:decreta,
Dig. 29, 2, 99.— Subst.: Frontōnĭāni, ōrum, m., pupils of Fronto, Frontonians, Sid. Ep. 1, 1. -
3 Frontoniani
1.fronto, ōnis, m. amplif. [2. frons], one who has a broad forehead:2.ecquos naevum habere? ecquos silos, flaccos, frontones, capitones?
Cic. N. D. 1, 29, 80.—Hence,Fronto, ōnis, m., a proper name. So esp.: M. Cornelius Fronto, a famous Roman orator from Cirta, in Numidia, who lived about A. D. 90-168. Small portions of his writings have been discovered in palimpsests by Angelo Mai. —II.Deriv. Frontōnĭānus, a, um, adj., of Fronto, Frontonian:decreta,
Dig. 29, 2, 99.— Subst.: Frontōnĭāni, ōrum, m., pupils of Fronto, Frontonians, Sid. Ep. 1, 1. -
4 Frontonianus
1.fronto, ōnis, m. amplif. [2. frons], one who has a broad forehead:2.ecquos naevum habere? ecquos silos, flaccos, frontones, capitones?
Cic. N. D. 1, 29, 80.—Hence,Fronto, ōnis, m., a proper name. So esp.: M. Cornelius Fronto, a famous Roman orator from Cirta, in Numidia, who lived about A. D. 90-168. Small portions of his writings have been discovered in palimpsests by Angelo Mai. —II.Deriv. Frontōnĭānus, a, um, adj., of Fronto, Frontonian:decreta,
Dig. 29, 2, 99.— Subst.: Frontōnĭāni, ōrum, m., pupils of Fronto, Frontonians, Sid. Ep. 1, 1. -
5 Bacchylides
Bacchylĭdēs, is, m., = Bakchulidês, a Greek lyric poet of Ceos, a nephew of Simonides, who lived about 470 B.C., Amm. 25, 4, 3.—Hence, Bacchylĭdĭus, a, um, adj., of Bacchylides:metrum,
Serv. Centim. 2, 5, p. 1819 P. -
6 Bacchylidius
Bacchylĭdēs, is, m., = Bakchulidês, a Greek lyric poet of Ceos, a nephew of Simonides, who lived about 470 B.C., Amm. 25, 4, 3.—Hence, Bacchylĭdĭus, a, um, adj., of Bacchylides:metrum,
Serv. Centim. 2, 5, p. 1819 P. -
7 Caianus
Gāĭus (less correctly Cāĭus;II.trisyl.,
Cat. 10, 30; Mart. 9, 22, 12; 11, 36, 8); gen. Gāi (voc. Gāi, Mart. 10, 16, 1), m., and Gāĭa, ae, f. [for Gavius; from gaudeo], a Roman prœnomen, usu. written C.; v. the letter G. Gaia was written O, Quint. 1, 7, 28; Vel. Long. p. 2218; P. prol. p. 1502.— At marriage festivals it was customary to call the bridegroom and bride Gaius and Gaia, Fest. s. v. Gaia, p. 71; Quint. l. l.; Cic. Mur. 12 fin. —In partic.A.An eminent jurist who lived about A.D. 110-180, author of the Institutionum Commentarii IV., which contain a systematic summary of the Roman law of family relations, of private property, and of actions; and which for generations was a standard educational work on the subject. This work was known, however, to modern scholars only by the fragments preserved in the Pandects, etc., until in 1816 Niebuhr discovered in the Chapter House of Verona a nearly complete MS. of the original work of Gaius, over which works of St. Jerome had been written. Teuffel, Gesch. d. Röm. Lit. p. 812 sqq.—B.In post-Aug. historians, esp., the emperor Gaius Caligula; hence, Gāiānus or Cāiānus, a, um, adj., of or belonging to Caligula:custodia,
Sen. Tranq. 11:clades,
id. ib. 14 fin.:expeditiones,
Tac. 4, 15:nex,
Suet. Tit. 1:as (because lowered in value by him),
Stat. Sil. 4, 9, 22. -
8 Donatus
Dōnātus, i, m.I.Aelius D., a celebrated Roman grammarian of the fourth century of our era, teacher of Jerome, and commentator on Terence; cf. Baehr's Lit. Gesch. p. 533 sq., and 68.—II.Tiberius Claudius D., a commentator on Vergil, who lived about A.D. 400; cf. Baehr's Lit. Gesch. p. 91; Teuffel, Röm. Lit. § 423. -
9 Gaia
Gāĭus (less correctly Cāĭus;II.trisyl.,
Cat. 10, 30; Mart. 9, 22, 12; 11, 36, 8); gen. Gāi (voc. Gāi, Mart. 10, 16, 1), m., and Gāĭa, ae, f. [for Gavius; from gaudeo], a Roman prœnomen, usu. written C.; v. the letter G. Gaia was written O, Quint. 1, 7, 28; Vel. Long. p. 2218; P. prol. p. 1502.— At marriage festivals it was customary to call the bridegroom and bride Gaius and Gaia, Fest. s. v. Gaia, p. 71; Quint. l. l.; Cic. Mur. 12 fin. —In partic.A.An eminent jurist who lived about A.D. 110-180, author of the Institutionum Commentarii IV., which contain a systematic summary of the Roman law of family relations, of private property, and of actions; and which for generations was a standard educational work on the subject. This work was known, however, to modern scholars only by the fragments preserved in the Pandects, etc., until in 1816 Niebuhr discovered in the Chapter House of Verona a nearly complete MS. of the original work of Gaius, over which works of St. Jerome had been written. Teuffel, Gesch. d. Röm. Lit. p. 812 sqq.—B.In post-Aug. historians, esp., the emperor Gaius Caligula; hence, Gāiānus or Cāiānus, a, um, adj., of or belonging to Caligula:custodia,
Sen. Tranq. 11:clades,
id. ib. 14 fin.:expeditiones,
Tac. 4, 15:nex,
Suet. Tit. 1:as (because lowered in value by him),
Stat. Sil. 4, 9, 22. -
10 Gaianus
Gāĭus (less correctly Cāĭus;II.trisyl.,
Cat. 10, 30; Mart. 9, 22, 12; 11, 36, 8); gen. Gāi (voc. Gāi, Mart. 10, 16, 1), m., and Gāĭa, ae, f. [for Gavius; from gaudeo], a Roman prœnomen, usu. written C.; v. the letter G. Gaia was written O, Quint. 1, 7, 28; Vel. Long. p. 2218; P. prol. p. 1502.— At marriage festivals it was customary to call the bridegroom and bride Gaius and Gaia, Fest. s. v. Gaia, p. 71; Quint. l. l.; Cic. Mur. 12 fin. —In partic.A.An eminent jurist who lived about A.D. 110-180, author of the Institutionum Commentarii IV., which contain a systematic summary of the Roman law of family relations, of private property, and of actions; and which for generations was a standard educational work on the subject. This work was known, however, to modern scholars only by the fragments preserved in the Pandects, etc., until in 1816 Niebuhr discovered in the Chapter House of Verona a nearly complete MS. of the original work of Gaius, over which works of St. Jerome had been written. Teuffel, Gesch. d. Röm. Lit. p. 812 sqq.—B.In post-Aug. historians, esp., the emperor Gaius Caligula; hence, Gāiānus or Cāiānus, a, um, adj., of or belonging to Caligula:custodia,
Sen. Tranq. 11:clades,
id. ib. 14 fin.:expeditiones,
Tac. 4, 15:nex,
Suet. Tit. 1:as (because lowered in value by him),
Stat. Sil. 4, 9, 22. -
11 Gaius
Gāĭus (less correctly Cāĭus;II.trisyl.,
Cat. 10, 30; Mart. 9, 22, 12; 11, 36, 8); gen. Gāi (voc. Gāi, Mart. 10, 16, 1), m., and Gāĭa, ae, f. [for Gavius; from gaudeo], a Roman prœnomen, usu. written C.; v. the letter G. Gaia was written O, Quint. 1, 7, 28; Vel. Long. p. 2218; P. prol. p. 1502.— At marriage festivals it was customary to call the bridegroom and bride Gaius and Gaia, Fest. s. v. Gaia, p. 71; Quint. l. l.; Cic. Mur. 12 fin. —In partic.A.An eminent jurist who lived about A.D. 110-180, author of the Institutionum Commentarii IV., which contain a systematic summary of the Roman law of family relations, of private property, and of actions; and which for generations was a standard educational work on the subject. This work was known, however, to modern scholars only by the fragments preserved in the Pandects, etc., until in 1816 Niebuhr discovered in the Chapter House of Verona a nearly complete MS. of the original work of Gaius, over which works of St. Jerome had been written. Teuffel, Gesch. d. Röm. Lit. p. 812 sqq.—B.In post-Aug. historians, esp., the emperor Gaius Caligula; hence, Gāiānus or Cāiānus, a, um, adj., of or belonging to Caligula:custodia,
Sen. Tranq. 11:clades,
id. ib. 14 fin.:expeditiones,
Tac. 4, 15:nex,
Suet. Tit. 1:as (because lowered in value by him),
Stat. Sil. 4, 9, 22.
См. также в других словарях:
(the) Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe — The Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe [The Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe] a traditional ↑nursery rhyme about a poor woman who has many children: There was an old woman who lived in a shoe, She had so many children she didn’t know what to do. She gave … Useful english dictionary
Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe — a traditional nursery rhyme about a poor woman who has many children: There was an old woman who lived in a shoe, She had so many children she didn’t know what to do. She gave them some broth without any bread; And whipped them all soundly and… … Universalium
About a Boy — This article is about the novel. For the film, see About a Boy (film); for the film s soundtrack album by Badly Drawn Boy, see About a Boy (soundtrack). Infobox Book | name = About a Boy title orig = translator = image caption = author = Nick… … Wikipedia
Who Are the DeBolts? And Where Did They Get Nineteen Kids? — Directed by John Korty Produced by Jo … Wikipedia
who\ is\ who — • who s who • who is who informal 1. Who this one is and who that one is; who the different ones in a group of people are or what their names or positions are. It is hard to tell who is who in the parade because everyone in the band looks alike.… … Словарь американских идиом
who's\ who — • who s who • who is who informal 1. Who this one is and who that one is; who the different ones in a group of people are or what their names or positions are. It is hard to tell who is who in the parade because everyone in the band looks alike.… … Словарь американских идиом
Who Would Have Thought It? — is a novel written by María Ruiz de Burton and published in 1872.This novel was the first to be written in English by a Mexican living in the United States. [Harvnb|Rivera|2006|p= 82] It details the struggles of a Mexican born girl, Lola, in an… … Wikipedia
Who's Your Daddy? (TV series) — Who s Your Daddy? was a short lived Fox reality television program hosted by Emmy winning soap opera actress Finola Hughes. The first of six planned episodes aired in January 2005 to low ratings and a torrent of hostile press attention, prompting … Wikipedia
Who's the Boss? — Infobox Television show name = Who s The Boss caption = format = Sitcom camera = Multi camera runtime = 23 minutes creator = Martin Cohan Blake Hunter company = Hunter Cohan Productions Embassy Television (1984 1988) ELP Communications/Columbia… … Wikipedia
Who is a Jew? — Part of a series of articles on Jews and Judaism … Wikipedia
Who Framed Roger Rabbit — This article is about the film. For other uses, see Who Framed Roger Rabbit (disambiguation). Who Framed Roger Rabbit Theatrical release poster Directed by … Wikipedia