- Chæronea
- -æ
s f sg 1
Chéronée (GR)
Dictionarium Latino-Gallicum botanicae. 2013.
Dictionarium Latino-Gallicum botanicae. 2013.
CHÆRONEA — a town in Boeotia, where Philip of Macedon defeated the Athenians, and extinguished the liberties of Greece … The Nuttall Encyclopaedia
Sacred Band of Thebes — The Sacred Band of Thebes (ancient Greek: polytonic| τῶν Hierós Lókhos tón Thebón) was a troop of picked soldiers, numbering 150 age structured pairs, which formed the elite force of the Theban army in the 4th century BC. [Ludwig, p. 60.] It was… … Wikipedia
The Mill of Good Luck — Directed by Victor Iliu Written by Titus Popovici Ioan Slavici Alexandru Struteanu Starring Constantin Codrescu Geo Barton Ioana Bulcă Colea Răutu Olga Tudorache … Wikipedia
rogne — [ rɔɲ ] n. f. • 1888; « querelle » région.XVIIe; « grognement » 1501; de 2. rogner ♦ Fam. Colère, mauvaise humeur. Être en rogne contre qqn, qqch. ⇒ 2. rogner. Être dans une rogne terrible. Se mettre, se foutre en rogne. « Histoire de les foutre… … Encyclopédie Universelle
PHILIP OF MACEDON — the father of Alexander the Great, usurped the kingdom from the infant king Amyntas, his nephew and ward, in 360 B.C.; having secured his throne, he entered on a series of aggressive wars, making expeditions into Thrace and Thessaly; the siege … The Nuttall Encyclopaedia
PLUTARCH — celebrated Greek biographer and moralist, born at Chæronea, in Boeotia; studied at Athens; paid frequent visits to Rome, and formed friendships with some of its distinguished citizens; spent his later years at his native place, and held a… … The Nuttall Encyclopaedia
rogna — ró·gna s.f. 1. TS med. → scabbia 2. TS vet. malattia cutanea di natura parassitaria 3. TS bot. malattia provocata da un fungo che intacca il tronco di alcune piante 4. AU fam., fig., cosa o persona molto fastidiosa, grana, briga: che rogna questo … Dizionario italiano
roynish — ˈrȯinish adjective Etymology: Middle English, from royne scurf, scab (from Middle French rogne, from assumed Vulgar Latin ronea, probably alteration influenced by Latin rodere to gnaw of Latin aranea spider, spider web) + ish more at … Useful english dictionary