- the
death of his
friend Abraham Setrakian, Fet
struggles to
decipher the
Occido Lumen, a tome
holding the key to
defeating the Master. He is
aided by Mr...
- the same
formation in
other languages include Latin occidens 'west' from
occidō 'to go down, to set' and
Hebrew מַעֲרָב (maarav) 'west' from עֶרֶב (erev)...
- Setrakian, an
elderly vampire hunter, is
hopeful that the lost grimoire,
Occido Lumen,
holds the key to
defeating the Master, and
searches for it before...
- "Occident"
derives from the
Latin word
occidens meaning "west" (lit.
setting <
occido fall/set). The use of the word for "setting" to
refer to the west (where...
- "Occident"
derives from the
Latin word occidens,
meaning west (lit.
setting <
occido fall/set). This term
meant the west (where the sun sets) but has fallen...
-
clues to
defeat his
ancient nemesis. He
discovers a copy of a page from the
Occido Lumen, a
legendary tome
which may
reveal how to kill the Master. He confronts...
- means. It
literally translates as "city-killing" (Latin urbs "city" +
Latin occido "to kill"). The term was
first coined by the
science fiction author Michael...
-
ictum "to strike" metuō, metuere, metuī, metūtum "to fear, be apprehensive"
occīdō, occīdere, occīdī, occīsum "to kill" ostendō, ostendere, ostendī, ostentum...
-
writing separately. For instance, the
authors all
happen to use the word
occido with
respect to killing, a
total of 42 occurrences, but only once do any...
-
Owens (ed.),
Arabic as a
Minority Language (2000), p. 1. Use of
Latinate occido-centrism
remains rare (e.g.
Alexander Lukin,
Political Culture of the Russian...