«DESULTOR» İLE İLİŞKİLİ PORTEKIZCE KİTAPLAR
desultor sözcüğünün kullanımını aşağıdaki kaynakça seçkisinde keşfedin.
desultor ile ilişkili kitaplar ve Portekizce edebiyattaki kullanımı ile ilgili bağlam sağlaması için küçük metinler.
1
Marlowe's Ovid: The Elegies in the Marlowe Canon
The analogous obstinacy of the desultor surfaces in the language that Marlowe
charges with the aforementioned imagery ofsight:“View me, mybecks, and
speakingcountenance / Take,and receiueeach secret amorous glance” (AOE A4
...
Professor M L Stapleton, 2014
2
The Illustrated Companion to the Latin Dictionary and Greek ...
which he rode without reins or saddle, as shown by the annexed example, from a
terra-cotta lamp, and received the name of desultor from the practice of leaping
from one to the other, while the animals were at their full speed. (Isidor. Orig. xviii.
3
A phraseological Latin-English dictionary
Disuse, desuetude, a being unaccustomed to. desultor, oris. m. A rider who, at
the public games, leaped from one horse to another : desultor amoris, a
changeable lover, Ov. desultorius, a, um. adj. Of a desultor, q. v.; (in. as mint.) a
desultor ...
4
A Dictionary of Roman and Greek Antiquities: With Nearly ...
DESULTOR. DEXTEALE. 239 2. Ad undertaker; who made all the arrangements
for a funeral, and directed the procession, at the head of which he walked,
attended by lictors clothed in black. Hor. Ep. i. 7. 6. 1 1. mat. ad Terent Adelph, L
2. 7.
5
Novo dicionário da língua portuguesa
Cf. Filinto, D. Man., II, 31. (De des... + tyrannizar) *Desudação*,(su)f.Actode suar
muito.(Lat. desudatio) *Desultor*, (sul) m. Cavalleiro romano,que,nos jogos
públicos, saltava de um cavallo para outro. (Lat. desultor) *Desultório*, (sul)adj.
Cândido de Figueiredo, 1937
6
Index verborum amatoriorum
Ou., Rem., 110. Interdum sensum habet haec uox parum honestum : Ou., Am., III,
vu, 14. Desultor amoris iocose dicitur qui amorem saepe mutat : Ou., Am., I, m, 15
: non inihi inillc placent, non sum desultor amoris. Detrahere est quasi auferre, ...
7
Memoirs of the Court of Augustus
This Rider was called Desultor ; the Epithet wittily given by Mes- sala to Dellius,
and so happily applied, that it stuck to him forever. And here we cannot but
observe in justice to our modern Desultor, Mi. Johnson, whom we could not miss
this ...
Thomas Blackwell, John Mills, 1753
8
Spenser's Ovidian Poetics
Like the desultor and Petrarch, he relishes his suffering: ''Ne doe I wish . . . / to be
acquit from my continuall smart'' (42.5–6), which the wise philosopher of the
Hymnes explains in this way: ''th'euils which poore louers greeue,'' he says, ''Doe
...
Michael L. Stapleton, 2009
9
Speculum Iuris: Roman Law as a Reflection of Social and ...
Discussing the sale of mules, Ulpianus features as the buyer in one case a
desultor, that is, an acrobat speciali2ed in jumping from one animal to the otlicr.
Desultores ate not ubiquitous social chatacrers in legal rexts, but both lireraty and
epi- ...
Jean-Jacques Aubert, Adriaan Johan Boudewijn Sirks, 2002
10
English-Latin Lexicon, Prepared to Accompany Leverett's ...
Numidis, desultorum in mod urn, in recentem eqiium ex fesso traneultare mos rr.n
. — Figur. Orid. Non sum desultor amorte, a changeling. Senec, Desultor
bellorum civilium, one who often changed sides. DiSOLTöRIÖS (desultor), a, urn,
adj.
Frederick Percival Leverett, Jacobo Facciolati, Egidio Forcellini, 1838