- The
Nemean lion (/nɪˈmiːən/; ‹See Tfd›Gr****: Νεμέος λέων, translit. Neméos léōn; Latin: Leo Nemeaeus) was a
monster in Gr****
mythology that
lived at Nemea...
- lion by its claw" (in Latin, ex
ungue Leonem). D. T.
Whiteside notes that the
letter in
French has ex
ungue Leonem preceded by the
French word comme. The...
- 1927) In
other words, one can
extrapolate the
whole from the part. Ex
ungue leonem, "from its claw [we can know] the lion," is a
similar phrase,
noted in Benet's...
-
Garonne Flag Coat of arms Motto(s):
Lilia sola
regunt lunam undas castra leonem. "The fleur-de-lis
alone rules over the moon, the waves, the castle, and...
- anonymous, he was
recognized by
Bernoulli as its author, "comme ex
ungue leonem" ("as by the claw [we recognize] the lion"). In 1699 Newton's
position as...
- of heaven");
motto of the
Cathedral School, Townsville.
tanquam ex
ungue leonem we know the lion by his claw Said in 1697 by
Johann Bernoulli about Isaac...
-
animaliumIV , 27:"Gryphem, Indi**** animal,
audio similiter quadrupedem, ut
leonem,.."
Quoted in
English translation by
Mayor (2011), p. 33 and
excerpted with...
- range. The
English word lion is
derived via Anglo-Norman liun from
Latin leōnem (nominative: leō),
which in turn was a
borrowing from
Ancient Gr**** λέων...
- 91:13,
which reads "super
aspidem et basilis**** ambulabis, et
conculcabis leonem et draconem" in the
Latin Vulgate,
literally "You will
tread on the asp...
- suspiret, eheu, ne
rudis agminum sponsus lacessat regius asperum tactu leonem, quem
cruenta per
medias rapit ira caedes.
Dulce et
decorum est pro patria...