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Word: natus (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...complete program is as follows: Creator alme siderum--Puer natus est nobis--Adoro to devotee Allegrl Miscrere Allegrl Sacerdotes Domini Byrd Cherubim Song Rachmaninov Chorus of Bacchantes, from "Philemon and Baucis" Gounod Canzonet and Ballet--I Go Before, My Darling Morley On the Plains, Fairy Trains Weelkes Choral Hymns from the Rig-Veda Hymn to Agni--Hymn to Indra--Hymn to Manas Holst Coronation Scene, from "Boris Godounov" Moussorgsky Four Folk Songs The Galway Piper Gute Nacht The reapers' Song Turn Ye to Me Drake's Drum Coleridge-Taylor Love Songs Brahms Let Their Celestial Concerts All Unite from "Samson...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CLEE CLUB TO SING IN MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS | 5/13/1926 | See Source »

...etiam absentes, velut praesentes interfuimus. Hodie vero e Collegii illius professoribus unum re vera praesentem videmus, virum et suo et patris et Collegii sui nomine nobis dilectum. Donec Alpium inter culmina ingentes illae glaciei moles desuper paullatim descendunt, tam diupatris illius nomen superstes vivet, qui, in Republica non magna natus, Rempublicam maximam gloriae suae fecit participem, expertus scilicet vetera illa verba quam vera essent...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Alexander Agassiz Honored. | 3/2/1887 | See Source »

...park of the gods was not frequently cultivated. "Another one, "Exegi monimentum are perennius," "I have eaten a monument, and c." Here is one from Livy, "Venus ei candida veste apparuit," "Venus appeared to him with a white vest on." Another from the historian, "P. Scipio equestri genere natus," "Publius Scipio was born at a horse race." Here are two renderings of apparently cognate origin: "Caesaris bonas leges," "The bony legs of Caesar." "Nune viridi membra sub arbuto stratus," "He having now stretched his green limbs under the arbutus." We could add to the catalogue, "Sed damnatio, quid confert...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Latin at Sight. | 1/20/1885 | See Source »

...finally, the ancient scholar was there, who every year nobly refuses his dinner, that he may spend the afternoon in exhorting the lazy scapegraces lolling in the halls and on the grass to persevere in polite studies. We can afford to forget the contempt of his "Hibernicus ego natus sum; tu es Americanus" when we remember how well he sugared his pill to be in studiis diligentissimos by Paul's famous advice to Timothy...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 9/25/1873 | See Source »

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