-
referred to as the
White Rider). He is
thought to
carry a bow (Gr**** τόξον,
tóxon) and wear a victor's
crown (Gr**** στέφανος, stéphanos).
According to the...
-
derived from the Gr**** word for yew, toxos,
which is
hauntingly similar to
toxon,
their word for bow and toxicon,
their word for poison. It is
presumed that...
-
other animals including humans. The name is
derived from the Gr**** word
toxon 'bow, quiver' and the
Latin word caro 'flesh'. T.
canis live in the small...
- Today.
Archived from the
original on 2
March 2023.
Retrieved 2
March 2023. "
Toxons and the Taj". UNESCO. 30
April 1997.
Archived from the
original on 26 May...
- καμπυλα τοξα [kam**** toxa] in the
state of rest; but τοξον παλιντονον [
toxon palintonon], the
recurved bow when
prepared for use." The
standard weapon...
- to make javelins. The
Latin word is
probably borrowed, via Gr**** τόξον
tóxon, from taxša, the
Scythian word used for "yew" and "bow" (cognate of Persian...
-
Toxoplasma gondii after the
curved shape of its
infectious stage (Gr**** root
toxon = bow). The
first recorded case of
congenital toxoplasmosis was in 1923...
-
terms "toxic" and "toxin"
derive from the
ancient Gr**** word for "bow",
toxon, from Old
Persian *taxa-, "an arrow".
Poisoned arrows were used by real...
-
symptoms of infection." The word
draws its
origins from the Gr**** noun τόξον
toxon (meaning "arc"), in
reference to the use of bows and
poisoned arrows as...
- name
Toxoplasma is a
reference to its morphology: Toxo, from Gr**** τόξον (
toxon, 'arc, bow'), and πλάσμα (plasma, 'shape, form') and the host in
which it...