-
obedientia caeterorum sine illo
ardore membrorum, quae
voluptatis nutu
moventur, non
aestu libidinis concitantur." On
marriage and
concupiscence 2.29,...
- aut
intentione ut nervis, aut
spiritu ut tibiis, vel his, quae ad
aquam moventur, aut
percussione quadam, ut in his, quae in
concava quaedam aerea feriuntur...
- to an
early form of Tabula. De
Calculorum Motu.
Calculi partim ordine moventur,
partim vage: ideo
alios ordinarios,
alios vagos appellant; at vero qui...
-
principle as: "Everything that
moves is
moved by
something else. (Omne quod
moventur ab alio movetur.)" When the
cause ceases, so does the effect. The cause...
-
transitive verb and can take a
direct object:
subabsurda dīcendō rīsūs
moventur (Cicero) 'by
saying incongruous things laughs (rīsūs) are raised' They...
- Domino, benedicite, fontes, Domino. BENEDICITE, cete, et omnia, quae
moventur in aquis, Domino, benedicite,
omnes volucres caeli, Domino. BENEDICITE...
-
principle "Everything that
moves is
moved by
something else." (Omne quod
moventur ab alio movetur.),
Ockham took the
first step
toward the
principle of inertia...
- Galileo's
Sidereus Nuncius, De
maculis solaribus, and De iis quae
natantur aut
moventur in aqua. The
censorship of Biancani's
previous work, however, affected...
-
luminis refractione et motu (in Latin). Naples. 1740. De
corporum quae
moventur viribus,
earumque aestimandarum ratione (in Latin). Naples:
Felice Mosca...
- ("Dragons and all the depths");
alongside are the
words cete et
omnia quae
moventur in
aquis ("whales and all that move in the water"),
which in
medieval exegesis...