「GREEK」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)2ページ目
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ersity of Bristol where he became Professor of | Greek and emeritus in 1962. |
The Cambridge History of Later | Greek and Early Medieval Philosophy, (as Editor), Ca |
ncient narrative literature, in particular the | Greek and Roman novel. |
Written records from | Greek and Egyptian voyagers give details about the p |
Sir Edward Maunde Thompson, An Introduction to | Greek and Latin Palaeography Clarendon Press, 1912. |
Each side, both | Greek and Trojan, will have four major characters. |
An Introduction to | Greek and Latin Palaeography, Oxford: Clarendon Pres |
She obtained a BA in Modern | Greek and Political Science at the University of Mel |
Do you perhaps mean characters from | Greek and Roman classics and French literature? |
p, Grassmann's Law may have a common origin in | Greek and Sanskrit. |
Euler's 1979 examination on shared features in | Greek and Sanskrit nominal flection. |
Many continue speaking | Greek and their native Slavic dialects. |
Visigothic, Hispano-Roman, Frankish, Armenian, | Greek, and Roman ancestry. |
The genus names was formed from | Greek and means precisely "short-spiked". |
Vortex was born in Africa and is of Ethiopian, | Greek and Italian descent. |
He speaks | Greek, and has written on the political culture of t |
Greco was born at Catania, whose | Greek and Roman remains grow in him a passion for an |
A dictionary of | Greek and Latin : combining forms used in zoological |
It is also a method of divination among | Greek and Serb farmers, even today, probably of extr |
His work is not widely accepted by | Greek and Roman schools of thought. |
anks - British archaeologist who taught Latin, | Greek and Ancient History 1983-1988. |
Born in 1913, Morrison was professor of | Greek and head of the classics department at the Uni |
own for his critical examinations of classical | Greek and Roman history. |
Greek and native | |
He is fluent in | Greek and English, and is also 60% Greek, 20% Vietna |
wrote much on the history and bibliography of | Greek and Latin literature. |
The | Greek and Slavonic annexe consists of European langu |
ed. Barrington Atlas of the | Greek and Roman World (Princeton, 2000). |
rkic influences, Dankoff posits some amount of | Greek and Buddhist influence on the text. |
Dictionary of | Greek and Roman Geography. |
He is | Greek and Italian descent. |
He was well versed in | Greek and Hebrew, and enjoyed a reputation as an elo |
of twelve she was able to converse fluently in | Greek and Latin. |
collection of quotations or “sentences,” from | Greek and Latin Church Fathers, the former translate |
Mavromichalis' father is | Greek, and that's why both Finnish and English have |
born in Cairo around (?1570s CE) and acquired | Greek and Turkish in Egypt. |
ates text from the public domain Dictionary of | Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology by William S |
The name xanthophloea is derived from | Greek and means "yellow bark". |
Joseph College, where served as professor of | Greek and Latin at the high school department. |
German dubbing, Balki was said to be an actual | Greek and Mypos a Greek island. |
He became professor of | Greek and Oriental languages and of theology at the |
Biography of John Chrysostom from Smith's | Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology |
In Tebtunis, there were many | Greek and Roman buildings. |
verpool architect for four years, Ward studied | Greek and logic and was a Sunday School Teacher. |
She is fluent in English and | Greek and has a good facility in French. |
It is performed in | Greek and is the artist's first song in the language |
as a Dutch lawyer, journalist and professor in | Greek and History, of Huguenot origin. |
Her most recent book is | Greek and Roman Actors (Cambridge 2002), co-edited w |
There is also an extensive | Greek and Roman necropolis. |
was the first major battle fought between the | Greek and Ottoman armies in the First Balkan War, an |
e Cruiser was an effective tank in the French, | Greek and early North African campaigns. |
lso learned to speak Italian, Spanish, French, | Greek and Arabic in the early years of his career. |
efer to appearances of the gods in the ancient | Greek and Near Eastern religions. |
Many settlements in Greece had | Greek and non-Greek forms. |
The term comes from the | Greek and literally means "two natures." |
Classical dialogues, | Greek and Roman |
It is bilingual, in ancient Egyptian and | Greek, and written in Egyptian hieroglyphs, Egyptian |
He later published studies on classical | Greek and Latin literature and on Byzantine music. |
Bishop Currier knew | Greek and Hebrew and was fluent in Latin, English, D |
hia was probably partially responsible for the | Greek and Armenian cultural influences that appeared |
Kingdom, Tiberius Julius Aspurgus, who was of | Greek and Iranian ancestry. |
He also studied ancient | Greek and Hebrew. |
ems also to have shown an interest in learning | Greek and to have commissioned at least one Greek ma |
Samaritan, Syriac, Arabic, Persian, Ethiopic, | Greek and Latin. |
hool and two universities, he is proficient in | Greek and Latin. |
Some buildings are named after | Greek and Roman architecture such as the Basilica an |
Gores is an Israeli immigrant (of | Greek and Lebanese descent) who was raised in Flint, |
The generic name comes from | Greek and signifies "spurless". |
He graduated from BYU with a BA Classical | Greek and Latin in 1990. |
The scientific name is derived from Ancient | Greek and has the same meaning. |
The Hellenistic Philosophers Vol. 2 | Greek and Latin texts with notes with D.N.Sedley (Ca |
These included the | Greek Andravida, which was created by crossing nativ |
These works included Strabo in | Greek, another on Marcus Aurelius, his translation o |
eneric name means "near" or "besides" (para in | Greek) Anthodon. |
onstantine Cephalas compiled pieces of several | Greek anthologies, including The Boyish Muse, to mak |
Two epigrams by him in the | Greek Anthology (Anthol. |
45.) Eleven of them are in the | Greek Anthology, but the genuineness of two of these |
survives, with large sections preserved in the | Greek Anthology. |
σύνη and an epigram of hers is included in the | Greek Anthology. |
translated Theocritus and the epigrams of the | Greek Anthology. |
d, and several have been incorporated into the | Greek Anthology. |
d sororities have joined forces to establish a | Greek Anti-Hazing Hotline. |
thens more than 2000 immigrants and members of | Greek anti-racist groups marched on the Greek parlia |
ountry, and wealthy Europeans began to collect | Greek antiquities. |
Greek Apocalypse of Baruch or 3 Baruch predominantly | |
This article discusses the ' | Greek Apocalypse of Ezra'. |
Like the | Greek Apocalypse of Ezra, the work is clearly Christ |
sun and in this respect was comparable to the | Greek Apollo. |
from Panorpidae, a related family, and Ancient | Greek apteros "wingless". |
Ahlbert had a competent knowledge of Hebrew, | Greek, Arabic and Uyghur. |
nguages, Catalan, Old Church Slavonic, Ancient | Greek, Arabic, and Latin. |
23 October: Manolis Andronikos, | Greek archaeologist (d.1992). |
In 1982, the | Greek archaeologist Yannis Sakellarakis unveiled a l |
Excavations began in 1949 by the | Greek archaeologist Spyridon Marinatos. |
30 March: Manolis Andronikos, | Greek archaeologist |
sive exploration was carried out by French and | Greek archaeologists in the 1960s. |
The Ure Museum of | Greek Archaeology and the Cole Museum of Zoology are |
In much of the | Greek Archaic Period, Aptera was under the control o |
dria was planned by Dinocrates, an experienced | Greek architect and city planner from Rhodes, who mo |
stratus of Cnidus (born 3rd century BC), was a | Greek architect and engineer. |
ere reconstructed under the supervision of the | Greek architect, Sebastos. |
ource reports that Atik Sinan, was a Christian | Greek architect. |
Built in a classical style, but incorporating | Greek architectural touches, the chapel was extremel |
blic buildings constructed using the orders of | Greek architecture". |
Despite quotations from | Greek architecture, it was regarded as unusually mod |
Firaesi (Latinization) or Phiraisoi (original | Greek) are a people listed in Ptolemy's Geography (2 |
wo figures identified as Mars, god of war (the | Greek Ares), and Venus, goddess of love (the Greek A |
gentarii in Latin are bankers, money changers ( | Greek: Argyramoiboi) |
The name comes from the | Greek argyros (silver). |
His second round opponent was fellow | Greek Aristidis Akratopoulos, whom Paspatis defeated |
Glaphyra was a Monarch of | Greek, Armenian and Persian descent. |
arus was of Roman, Jewish, Nabataean, Edomite, | Greek, Armenian and Persian ancestry. |
a few places the stones are marked by Arabic, | Greek, Armenian and English charcoal and engraved gr |
ing terms in Arabic, Persian language, Turkic, | Greek, Armenian, and Mongolian language. |
Saray was occupied by | Greek armies for two years during the Turkish War of |
Early | Greek Armour and Weapons, Aldine (Hawthorne, NY), 19 |
In 1955, a | Greek army colonel of Greek Cypriot origin, George G |
, soldier, military officer and general in the | Greek Army (b.1784). |
ng the battle, approximately one-fourth of the | Greek army fled by swimming across the Prut. |
In 1912-13 he volunteers in the | Greek army and takes part in operations in Epirus an |
He served in the | Greek army during the Balkan Wars and World War I. |
The mosque was damaged in 1922 by the | Greek army during the Turkish War of Independence. |
He served in the | Greek army as a sergeant during the Balkan Wars of 1 |
He studied at the | Greek Army Academy and was commissioned into the Arm |
Armenian "blue helmets" serve within the | Greek Army battalion. |
He fought against the invading | Greek army during the Turkish War of Independence an |
ntributed to the resistance forces against the | Greek army that had begun to occupy Western Anatolia |
ana was a big morale booster for the irregular | Greek army. |
is an exact copy of the rotunda of the ancient | Greek Arsinoeon of Samothrace. |
Grammar of | Greek Art (1905) |
Greek art and literature, as well as some patristic | |
Greek Art on Greek Soil (1897) | |
aim was to focus on the harmony and purity of | Greek art and to deconstruct the Greek landscape and |
en Kunstgeschichte (Kalamis, A contribution to | Greek art), 1907 |
Hadrianic school: a chapter in the history of | Greek art, 1934 |
Griechische Kunstmythologie ( | Greek Art-mythology), Three volumes, Leipzig 1871/89 |
have the statuesque dignity and simplicity of | Greek art. |
was disastrous, as they were decimated by the | Greek artillery fire. |
Atofio Hrysafi is an album by popular | Greek artist Keti Garbi. |
(Blue and White) is a five track EP by popular | Greek artist Katy Garbi. |
logne) is the second album recorded by popular | Greek artist Elli Kokkinou. |
He was also an acquaintance of the | Greek artist Demetrios Galanis and the Romanian poet |
Greek artist Vassilikos recorded a cover version of | |
The monument itself was sculpted by the | Greek artist Georgios Kalakallas ,. |
es after the war, were immediately imitated by | Greek artists. |
ia is known in Italian as cepola and in modern | Greek as kordella. |
tudent of the Scriptures and a good scholar in | Greek as well as Hebrew. |
Megasthenes has written them in | Greek as Uri people in his book Indica. |
He speaks French, Arabic, and | Greek as well as English. |
with another Arab phylarch, al-Aswad, known in | Greek as Asouades. |
Omer Vrioni (known in | Greek as Ομέρ Βρυώνης, Omer Vryonis) was a leading O |
ger Anna Vissi, originally released in 2003 in | Greek as "Eisai" (You Are). |
Many of these diaspora Jews would have | Greek as their first language, and the Tanakh ("Old |
Andronicus of Cyrrhus ( | Greek:Ανδρόνικος Κυρρήστου) or Andronicus Cyrrhestes |
The | Greek astronomer Hipparchus introduced two cycles th |
named after Aristarchus of Samos, the ancient | Greek astronomer and mathematician. |
Harpalus was an ancient | Greek astronomer (flor. |
It is named after Conon of Samos, a | Greek astronomer and mathematician of the 3rd centur |
370 BC - ca. 300 BC) was a | Greek astronomer and mathematician. |
ious orthodoxy and astronomy occurred with the | Greek astronomer Anaxagoras. |
This article concerns the | Greek astronomer. |
tical astronomy superseded most older texts of | Greek astronomy. |
The sublunary sphere is a concept derived from | Greek astronomy. |
on, who succeeded Richard Jebb as professor of | Greek at Cambridge in 1906, belonged to the Ad Eunde |
union he continued on as Adjunct Professor of | Greek at the Jefferson campus until 1868. |
1934, she married Philip Davis, a professor of | Greek at Vassar. |
He competed as a | Greek at the 1896 Summer Olympics in Athens. |
was born in Janakkala, and became professor of | Greek at Helsinki in 1833. |
English classical scholar, regius professor of | Greek at Cambridge in 1547, and a physician. |
He also taught Classical | Greek at the University of Chicago. |
In 1844-45 he was professor of Latin and | Greek at the University of Pennsylvania. |
e 2001, he is teaching as Professor of Ancient | Greek at the Scuola Normale at Pisa. |
Byrne, John, "Mark-Anthony Turnage's | Greek at the RNCM", Musical Opinion, July 2000 (subs |
He became a Lecturer in | Greek at the University of Glasgow from 1920 to 1944 |
n Canons, numerals of the κεφαλαια (Coptic and | Greek) at the margin, and pictures. |
s represented by one athlete, Aleko Moullos (a | Greek), at the 1908 Summer Olympics in London, Engla |
In 1876, Wayte became a Professor of | Greek at the University College London. |
dreas Anastasopoulos (born April 2, 1976) is a | Greek athlete in the shot put. |
Dimitrios Tomprof was a | Greek athlete. |
between the two broke the tie in favor of the | greek athlete. |
Greek athletes have competed in every Summer Olympic | |
A re-issue of the album for the | Greek audience including revised song titles, Greek |
The name comes from | Greek aulos (name of the most important ancient Gree |
A total of five | Greek Austerity 2-10-0s have survived. |
She is a cousin of award-winning | Greek Australian filmmaker Anthony Maras. |
Ardhanarishvara is referred to by the | Greek author Stobaeus (c. |
Athens, 1948) is a | Greek author, literary critic and translator. |
he United States Army which surrendered him to | Greek authorities in 1946. |
He soon revolted against | Greek authority in Apulia and he and his Normans joi |
the EU border agency FRONTEX and will be under | Greek authority. |
Also known by | Greek authors by the name Glauce, e.g. in Apollodoru |
USC Order of Omega | Greek Awards, Certificate of Excellence in Community |
[Strong's 622] The Hebrew name is "Abaddon" ( | Greek: Aβαδδων), from the Aramaic root word "'abad", |
ng Ethnikos Asteras to the championship of the | Greek B Division. |
Georgios comes from a working class | Greek background mixed with Jewish heritage from one |
Because of his | Greek background, he is eligible to represent the Gr |
The genus name is derived from Ancient | Greek bakter "rod" and kera "horn". |
In 2006, Alpha Bank, a | Greek bank, proposed to acquire roughly half of Aban |
Tonis joined the | Greek baseball team for the 2004 Athens Olympics, bu |
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