- a
muscle that
flexes a joint. In anatomy,
flexion (from the
Latin verb
flectere, to bend) is a
joint movement that
decreases the
angle between the bones...
- the Aeneid. In Book VII, line 312 he
gives to Juno the
famous saying,
flectere si
nequeo superos,
Acheronta movebo: 'If I
cannot bend the will of Heaven...
- of
neuroanatomy "to
stretch out" (Latin: extendere), "to bend" (Latin:
flectere) "to
bring in" (Latin: adductere), "to lead away" (Latin: abducere) "press...
-
traditionally attributed to the
medieval philosopher Roscelin of Compiègne
flectere si
nequeo superos,
Acheronta movebo if I can not
reach Heaven I will raise...
- to
delight and to move' (docere/probare, delectare/conciliare, movere/
flectere).
Cicero breaks down the term
Docere further and
summarizes that 'to teach'...
-
flaccere flaccid flav-
yellow Latin flāvus
flavonoid flect-, flex- bend
Latin flectere,
flexus cir****flex, deflect, flex, flexible, flexile, flexion, flexor,...
-
traditionally attributed to the
medieval philosopher Roscelin of Compiègne
flectere si
nequeo superos,
Acheronta movebo if I can not
reach Heaven I will raise...
-
docere [to teach];
genera medium /
delectare [to amuse];
genera grande /
flectere [to persuade]),
which was
influenced by Cicero’s
Orator 1.3. Augustine...
- dīvīsī, dīvīsum "to divide" dūcō, dūcere, dūxī,
ductum "to lead" flectō,
flectere, flexī,
flexum "to bend, to twist" gerō, gerere, gessī,
gestum "to wear...
- compromise-formations, of
obtruding itself on
consciousness during the night.
Flectere si
nequeo superos,
Acheronta movebo.*(2) At any rate, the interpretation...