亚洲网紅露点

Advertisement

Advertisement

Quirites

[ kwi-rahy-teez, -ree- ]

plural noun

  1. the citizens of ancient Rome considered in their civil capacity.


Quirites

/ 办飞瑟藞谤补瑟迟颈藧锄 /

plural noun

  1. the citizens of ancient Rome
鈥淐ollins English Dictionary 鈥 Complete & Unabridged鈥 2012 Digital Edition 漏 William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 漏 HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Discover More

亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins

Origin of Quirites1

< Latin 蚕耻颈谤墨迟脓蝉, plural of 蚕耻颈谤墨蝉, associated, perhaps by folk etymology, with Cures, a Sabine town
Discover More

亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins

Origin of Quirites1

from Latin: inhabitants of Cures, later applied generally to Roman citizens
Discover More

Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Called in the MSS. the speech 鈥淒e imperio Gn忙i Pompeii鈥 鈥渁pud Quirites鈥 it is better known as the oration pro lege Manili芒, and because there is no compendious school edition of this speech, apart from others of the same orator in the hands of English school-boys, Professor Wilkins, of Owens College, has judiciously undertaken to prepare an edition of it, with the cognizance, sanction, and assistance of Karl Halm, of Munich, and his smaller edition for English students.

From

According to the legend, it was from Cures that Titus Tatius led to the Quirinal the Sabine settlers, from whom, after their union with the settlers on the Palatine, the whole Roman people took the name Quirites.

From

Quirites, kwi-r墨鈥瞭ez, n.pl. the citizens of ancient Rome in their civil capacity.

From

She had encountered Muzio many times in the studio of the sculptor Manlio, and, poor and apparently low as he was, Julia had found under the ragged garb of a mendicant her ideal of the proud race of the Quirites.

From

He is certainly a Roman, and if a Roman, he belongs to the race of the Quirites! my ideal people鈥攖he objects of my worship!

From

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement


Quirinusquirk