- ****erted
these names are conceptually- and linguistically-connected to
Diovis and
Diovis Pater; he
compares the
analogous formations Vedius-Veiove and fulgur...
- "god", ON Týr "Tīw" (the war god)
Iuppiter (Iovis), Old
Latin Diū-piter (
Diovis) "Jupiter"; diēs "day", deus, dīvus "god" Zdeús (Di(w)ós) "Zeus" d(i)yāús...
- Fidius", he was a son of Jove by
interpreting the
expression Dius
Fidius as
Diovis Filius (son of Jove); and in
order to
further clarify the
notion of Semo...
- dialects: Deús (Δεύς), Italic: *d(i)jous, Old Latin:
Dioue (or loue),
Dijovis (
diovis), Latin: Jove (Iove; gen. Iovis), the god of the Sky; Latin: Diūs, the god...
-
missing publisher (link) Gellius, Aulus. "De
nominibus deorum populi Romani Diovis et Vediovis".
Noctes Atticae [Attic Nights] (in Latin). Vol. V. 12. Retrieved...
- from the Indo-European root *dey-
shine represented in
Latin by dies day,
Diovis and Iuppiter.
However the form Di****
postulated by
Nigidius is not attested...
- interjection.
Varro states that his
teacher Aelius Stilo called this god
Diovis filium, i.e. Dius
Filius as the Gr**** Διόσκορον
Castorem on the grounds...
-
Deudorix epijarbas, the
cornelian or
hairy line blue, is a
species of
lycaenid or blue
butterfly found in
south and
southeast Asia from
India to Fiji,...
- Dolichus";
equivalent to the
ancient Teshub of the Hittites)
Domesticus Diovis Elicius (who
sends forth, elicits)
Epulo (who
gives or
takes part in banquets)...
-
Deudorix viridens Druce, 1891
Deudorix brilligi Tennent, 2000
Deudorix diovis Hewitson, 1863
Deudorix mathewi mathewi Druce, 1892
Deudorix eagon Tennent...