-
Linquo coax
ranis are the
first words of a two-line poem in
internally rhymed hexameters by
Serlo of Wilton. The
complete text is:
Linquo coax ranis,...
- *leykʷ-, *li-ne-kʷ- "to
leave behind" OE lēon "to lend" leiƕan "to lend"
linquō (linquere) "to
leave behind" leípō, limpánō "I
leave behind" riṇákti "(he)...
- PIE *leikʷ- (pres. *li-né-kʷ-) "leave behind" > *linkʷ-e/o- : *likʷ-ē- >
linquō "leaves" : liceō "is allowed; is for sale" (cf. Gr**** leípō, limpánō, Sanskrit...
- Schutz, A. H. "Where Were the Provençal
Vidas and
Razos Written?"
Modern Philology, 35:3 (Feb., 1938), pp. 225–232.
Linquo coax ranis, a
Latin equivalent...
- licitav- licitat- ligō lig- ligav- ligat- bind ligament, ligature,
obligation linquō linqu- liqu- lict-
abandon delict, delinquent, derelict, dereliction, relict...
-
Pergo per
albentes directo tramite campos Candentique uiae
uestigia cerula linquo Lucida nigratis fuscans anfractibus arua. Nec
satis est unam per campos...
-
planh on the
death of
Raimbaut of
Orange Approximate date
Serlo of Wilton, "
Linquo coax ranis"
Death years link to the
corresponding "[year] in poetry" article...
- légende de
Serlon de
Wilton ("The
Legend of
Serlo of Wilton", 1899. See also
Linquo coax ranis) Mœurs des
diurnales ("Habits of Day Persons",
under the pseudonym...
- He died in 1181. Serlo's
poems are in Latin, of
which the most
famous is
Linquo coax ranis. He is the
subject of an 1899
essay by the
French author Marcel...