- The
Hippocratic bench or
scamnum was a
device invented by
Hippocrates (c. 460 BC–380 BC),
which used
tension to aid in
setting bones. It is a forerunner...
- Bernouf, a
French author, who
points out that
scamilus is a
diminutive of
scamnum, a
small step (Fr.
petit banc),
which in some
parts of
France is emplo****...
- Polonius, and
other crimes which follow at the seat of the Duke of Horton,
Scamnum Court.
Inspector John
Appleby is
called by the
Government to investigate...
- Olim
truncus eram ficulnus,
inutile lignum, **** faber,
incertus scamnum faceretne Priapum,
maluit esse deum. deus inde ego,
furum aviumque maxima formido;...
- JAR? 𐃬 U+100EC 213 LANX lanx
COOKING BOWL
Furniture 𐃄 U+100C4 220 Ta
scamnum FOOTSTOOL 𐃅 U+100C5 225 ALV
alveus Weapons 𐃆 U+100C6 230 R HAS hasta...
- magister.
avete condiscipuli. discipuli. condiscipuli, lo**** mihi date meum.
scamnum. scamellum. sella.
densa te.
English First I
greet the master, who greets...
- on the wall. The
Praetentura ("stretching to the front")
contained the
Scamnum Legatorum, the
quarters of
officers who were
below general but
higher than...
-
people and were
common in theaters, amphitheaters,
odeons and auctions. The
scamnum,
related to the
subsellium but smaller, was used as both a
bench and a...
- from the
colloquial Latin word scamellum, the
Latin diminutive form of
scamnum.: 102 In Old
English orthography, the
voiceless postalveolar fricative...
- "skamnos" (σκαμνός), "skamnon" (σκάμνον) or "skamni" (σκαμνί) (Latin:
scamnum,
scannellum that
means "seat" or "footstool")
perhaps because the village...