- Lindsay):
Multis autem gentibus equum hostiarum numero haberi testimonio sunt Lacedaemoni, qui in
monte Taygeto equum ventis immolant,
ibidemque adolent...
-
literary topos, in
which Ennodius referred to a
captured Bulgar horse as "
equum Hunis****". In 505, the
alleged 10,000 Hun hor**** in the
Sabinian army...
-
filtrar filtri spargere felt
gardeno ĝardeno
hortum gardo kavalo ĉevalo
equum,
caballus maro maro mare
naciono nacio gentem,
natio studiar studi studere...
- writes: quae****que excēpit
turgentis verbera caudae, clūnibus aut agitāvit
equum lascīva supīnum, dīmittit
neque fāmōsum
neque sollicitum nē dītior aut formae...
-
English translation, runs as follows: (51.)
Gimer min ros. (da mihi meum
equum.) ["Give me my horse."] (52.)
Gimer min schelt. ["Give me my shield."] (53...
- doom to all who
possessed him,
giving rise to the proverb, ille homo
habet equum Seianum, said of
those suffering ill fortune.
Lucius Seius,
proconsul of...
- master's eye
fattens the horse" –
comes from the
Latin "Oculus
domini saginat equum"; and the
latter Latin proverb was
likely translated from a
still older...
- Otto
comes Mediolanensis perspexit, pro
imperatore se ad
mortem obiciens,
equum suum contradidit; nec mora, a
Romanis captus, et in
Urbem inductus, minutatim...
- (ISBN 978-91-89116-81-8, read
online archive).
Leszek Słupecki, "Per
sortes ac per
equum. Lot-casting and
hippomancy in the
North after saga
narratives and medieval...
- as
horse breeders (Vergil
calls their mythological progenitor Messapus equum domitor, "tamer of horses," at
Aeneid 7.691); see Pallottino, "Myths and...