- from Horace's
Carmen Saeculare. It read: Alme Sol,
possis nihil urbe Roma
visere maius (which
translates to: "Kind Sun, may you look upon
nothing greater...
-
expenses of the
royal Wardrobe in 1347,
there was
provision for
tunicae and
viseres (shirts and hats) for the
Christmas ludi (plays) of
Edward III. During...
- turning’ (< vertere, ‘turn’) The following, exceptionally, is 3rd conjugation:
vīsere, 'look at attentively, visit' (< vidēre, 'see') Occasionally, however, they...
- "to lift, raise, remove" vertō, vertere, vertī,
versum "to turn" vīsō,
vīsere, vīsī, vīsum "to visit" The
perfect has
suffix –uī. Examples: colō, colere...
-
inscription at the top of the arch
which read: Alme Sol,
possis nihil urbe Roma
visere maius (Latin for "Oh kind Sun, may you
never look upon a city
greater than...