- Senna(R), Séné(Lammens), Sene in
Alphita, السنى al-sanā and السني al-senī in Ibn al-Baitar;; Taraxa****(Skeat), Ataraxacon(
Alphita), Taraxa****(R);; Usnea(F),...
- to
plants from Polygonaceae). In the
Middle English glossary of
herbs Alphita (c. 1400–1425), it was
known as ars-smerte.[citation needed]
There have...
-
possibly come from the Gr****
goddess Alphito,
whose name is
related to
alphita, the "white flour"; alphos, a dull
white leprosy; and
finally the Proto-Indo-European...
- Devic, year 1876, page 201; downloadable.
Additional details at
zambacca (
Alphita, mid 15th century); sambacus(Simon of Genoa, late 13th century); زنبق =...
- this, it was
often roasted before being milled into co****
flour (ἄλφιτα
álphita).
Barley flour was used to make μᾶζα maza, the
basic Gr**** dish. Maza could...
-
nursemaids to
frighten little children into behaving. Her name is
related to
alphita, "white flour" (compare
Latin albus), and alphitomanteia, a form of divination...
-
Scuola Medica Salernitana, Firenze,
SISMEL –
Edizioni del Galluzzo, 2007 "
Alphita". Edición crítica y
comentario de
Alejandro García González.
Edizione ****onale...
-
known as the
Alphitopolis Stoa (ἀλφιτόπωλις στοά), from the Gr**** word
alphita (barley flour). The Stoa was a long
building which was used for the storage...
- of the
Liber iste and
Antidotarium Nicolai, or with the
glossary of the
Alphita, but
these are only
vague reminiscences that
could very well have come...
-
defined nitrum as "a kind of salt
brought from Alexandria",
Egypt – ref:
Alphita. In the
medieval Latin literature more
generally nitrum could also be a...