10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «APLUSTRE»
Discover the use of
aplustre in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
aplustre and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities
APLUSTRE. " ma." The French term adie comes from aches, ia the same
language, signifying " a brook." APLUSTRE (aflaarov), an ornament of wooden
plants, which constituted the highest part of the /wop ol a ship. The position of the
aplustre ...
William Smith, Charles Anthon, 1870
2
A dictionary of Greek and Roman antiquities, ed. by W. Smith
In tine cases we must suppose the aplustre to km: been directed, nut towards the
centre of the t*t»\. but in the opposite direction. TV iphutre rose immediately
behind the rahcraatar. who held the rudder and guided the •i:p. and it served in
some ...
Greek antiquities, sir William Smith, 1842
3
A school dictionary of Greek and Roman antiquities: abridged ...
abridged from the larger dictionary Sir William Smith, Charles Anthon. 28
APLUSTRE. the following cut. The ships which had decks were called cataphracti
{tiardQpilKroi), and tecta. or strata. At the time of the Trojan war the Greek ships
had no ...
Sir William Smith, Charles Anthon, 1846
586, Graiumque audax aplustre retentat. Lucretius, iv. 437, 438, at maris ignaris
in portu clauda videntur \ navigia aplustris fractis obnitier unda. This shews that
the aplustre reached down below the water-line, for Lucretius is speaking of the ...
5
Contributions to Latin Lexicography
142. Another explanation of the word made it = a very delicate kind of drink : Paul
. p. 10 sunt qui ' apludam' sorbilionis liquidissimum putent genus. Apludus, praen.
m. : C. I. L. 3. 2773 (Dalmatia). Aplustre, pi. -la, abl. sing, -i, and aplustrum, pi.
APLUSTRE. Schum.A genus formed forthe reception of those species ofB ULLA
whichhave the spire uncovered.Ex. Bulla Aplustre, (aplustre,aflag.) Auct. fig.289.
APLYSIA. Linn.(a, without; Πλυω, to wash.) Fam. Laplysiens, Lam. Aplysiana ...
George Brettingham Sowerby, 2014
7
The British Cyclopæedia of Natural History: Combining a ...
B. aplustre. Aplustre of some authors ; secondly, the species that are completely
convoluted, rotund, the spire very distinct, but not projecting, with a sort of
thickened band at the anterior part of the columella edge, as in the B. aplustre,
here ...
Charles Frederick Partington, 1835
8
Imperial Roman Naval Forces 31 BC-AD 500
Rome owed the design of her warships to the steady evolution of Greek and
other Mediterranean patterns over many centuries; both the beaked ramming
prow (rostrum) and the decorative upswept extension from the stern timbers (
aplustre) ...
9
American Journal of Numismatics
Above r. arm, APLUSTRE. Beneath 1'. arm, A I 2|. Beneath throne, 1¥1 | m.
Hague. (Same obverse die as used for nos. 32 and 33.) 35 'l'E'l'ltADltACllltl (Hill
no. 63). Similar. Similar. Above r. aI'ID,AI'LUSTRE. Beneath r. arm,A/\ | A ] 5|.
Beneath ...
10
The Numismatic journal
and, apparently, another sitting under the aplustre of the poop; it is furnished with
a mast having a stay and back-stay without shrouds; the stem is formidably
armed; and six oars, besides a rudder, appear along its side, as if issuing from ...