「Greeks」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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ompted his essay On the Living Language of the | Greeks, a favorite theme of his, especially in his la |
; the Life Achievement Prize of the Council of | Greeks Abroad (2000). |
were thought of as two celestial objects, the | Greeks accepted that the two were the same, but they |
ault against Sosthenes (an assault made by the | Greeks according to Acts 18:17) are not recorded. |
As the | Greeks advanced from Phaleron, Reshid sent some caval |
e declares that the accusations brought by the | Greeks against the Latins are “superfluous questions |
med at stopping atrocities by the Cypriots and | Greeks, against Turkish Cypriots and Turks living in |
arpathus, Casus and Nisyrus on the side of the | Greeks against Troy. |
nding member and which succeeded in mobilizing | Greeks against the Ottoman Empire culminating in the |
In addition, with the Bulgarians and | Greeks already in Thessaloniki, the appearance of Ser |
he Sumerians, the Babylonians, and the ancient | Greeks also used the heliacal risings of various star |
ging their forces up to some 35,000, while the | Greeks also brought up the 2nd Division from Macedoni |
It was probably settled by | Greeks, although it was controlled by Carthaginians a |
The Ancient | Greeks: An Introduction to Their Life and Thought (19 |
The | Greeks and Romans associated Virgo with their goddess |
and civilization going back to the Romans, the | Greeks and Biblical times. |
iangular harp occasionally used by the ancient | Greeks and probably derived from Assyria or Egypt. |
she was inspired by the example of the ancient | Greeks and Romans to create something that would be b |
Atenulf, Prince of Benevento, defected to the | Greeks and then Argyrus, his successor. |
The | Greeks and the British under George Milne set off the |
y, which was developed and systematized by the | Greeks and the Romans. |
rsuade Pandarus to break the truce between the | Greeks and the Trojans. |
of Kresna Gorge was fought in 1913 between the | Greeks and the Bulgarians during the Second Balkan Wa |
The | Greeks and the British were aiming to capture the Bul |
Qift was called Coptos by the | Greeks, and it was an important center for administra |
where he is equated with the most illustrious | Greeks and Romans. |
By the late 1800s a group of Serbs, | Greeks, and Russians appealed to the Holy Synod of th |
During the conflict, the | Greeks and Philhellenes were betrayed by Gogos Bakola |
urgical practices handed down from the ancient | Greeks and the Arabic surgeons. |
ge of the dead to be unlimited, to the ancient | Greeks and Romans, there is an indication that indivi |
opulation were Romanians, 11.0% Lipovans, 1.3% | Greeks, and 1.3% Ukrainians. |
man Literature (1840), of Munk's Metres of the | Greeks and Romans (1844), and of Guyot's Earth and Ma |
Noting that the | Greeks and other cultures used rhyta for ritual purpo |
The simplest analysis: Egypt, for | Greeks and for Egyptians themselves was a spring of h |
0 discussions in Erivan and Tiflis between the | Greeks and Armenians for a possible confederation, at |
The | Greeks and Stoics adopted a model of celestial sphere |
ation of Odessa by the Entente forces (French, | Greeks, and British) in 1919 he cooperated with the B |
d his course of Lectures on the Coinage of the | Greeks and Romans (Oxford, 1832). |
of ships, citing "neutrality", did not pick up | Greeks and Armenians who were forced to flee from the |
everything from the daily life of the ancient | Greeks and Romans to their geography, religion, and t |
nterests threatened by tensions between ethnic | Greeks and Turks. |
stered harmonious relations between the Pontic | Greeks and the Turkmen; besides, there were at least |
During a battle between the | Greeks and Trojans, Diomedes is impressed by the brav |
o that part of Libya, was overharvested by the | Greeks and was effectively driven to extinction. |
rseverance"), manned by Englishmen, Swedes and | Greeks, and provided with apparatus for the discharge |
n as Nelcynda and Tyndis to the Romans and The | Greeks and Thondi to the Taamils and is also the foun |
no's reign, much of the Euboea was lost to the | Greeks and pirates in the Atalante prevented food sup |
The Battle of Alamana was fought between the | Greeks and the Ottoman Empire during the Greek War of |
d so many others, were originally built by the | Greeks and were the only permanent structures to be f |
Greeks and Trojans (1951) | |
fects southern Europeans, such as Italians and | Greeks, and people from the Balkan countries such as |
hem to be more loyal to him, as enemies of the | Greeks and Armenians. |
ade, regain the Holy Land, and bring the Jews, | Greeks, and infidels back to Christ. |
ossession and non-African communities included | Greeks and Sephardic-Jews who had fled political unre |
Among the | Greeks and Romans, Babylonia or Chaldea was so identi |
Her lecture was entitled " | Greeks and Barbarians: The Classical Experience in th |
tures mention about Yavanas (fair people), the | Greeks and Romans who had been given permission to bu |
The | Greeks and the British set off from their base at The |
The | Greeks and the great Italians of the Renaissance appe |
l reverence by the Phoenicians, Carthaginians, | Greeks, and Romans. |
The | Greeks and Romans made wreaths for warriors and victo |
the established policy of awarding offices to | Greeks and Levantines instead of local boyars. |
lizations are the Americans, British, Germans, | Greeks, and the Romans. |
He conquered Benevento from the | Greeks and made himself prince there (895). |
istorical consultant for the BBC TV series The | Greeks and the Channel 4 series The Spartans, present |
ijanis, Crimean Tatars, Moldavians, Armenians, | Greeks, and others. |
However, a dispute between the | Greeks and the British over its aims and leadership r |
In 1844 he wrote: "Greece was given to the | Greeks, and in seeking any government for Syria, may |
As the | Greeks and New Zealanders approached the defensive po |
da-Parishishta associates them with the Sakas, | Greeks and Bactrians. |
were considered with the utmost seriousness by | Greeks and Romans alike. |
e British consul Green who refused to help the | Greeks and collaborated with the Turks, the French co |
12th day of peace, the mighty war between the | Greeks and the Trojans would resume. |
etsk, in 1780, from the Crimean Tatar-speaking | Greeks and from the villages Karakuba (131 men και 11 |
the author believes that the ancestors of “the | Greeks and the Romans, of the Indians and Persians, o |
lt of St. Titus in the 1360s, which united the | Greeks and the Venetian coloni against the financial |
Thoros was well prepared for the unsuspecting | Greeks and consequently won a decisive victory: as An |
Javan is generally associated with the ancient | Greeks and Greece (cf. |
with Egyptians, Wahabbis, Serbians, Albanians, | Greeks and Syrians, and had administrative problems f |
an rule were the mountain ranges (populated by | Greeks and inaccessible to the Ottoman Turks), as wel |
tle for arguing that humanity was divided into | Greeks and barbarians, and that the Greeks should kee |
The galettes were eventually adopted by the | Greeks, and it is there that a flour-water paste subs |
icting aims and the hatred between the Epirote | Greeks and the Latins. |
aris in 1814, whose purpose was to educate the | Greeks and prepare the struggle against Ottoman rule |
scholars, Matthew was intolerant towards both | Greeks and Latins, as well as unsympathetic towards S |
Trachis: Fictions, Pessimism, Ethics", in The | Greeks and Us, R. B. Louden and P. Schollmeier (eds.) |
es Polemon in his first book of history of the | Greeks, and Apion ... and Ptolemaeus the Mendesian, w |
red priest was deeply mourned by both Jews and | Greeks, and the king also, on his return, wept for hi |
Ancient | Greeks and Romans saw this object as a manger from wh |
Divisions became more intense among | Greeks and, during the legislative elections, the rig |
s anciently practised at least by Babylonians, | Greeks, Arabs and Scythians. |
All | Greeks are Europeans. |
hrough Lord Byron's paraphrase as "sons of the | Greeks, arise". |
inhabitants - Bulgarians, Ottoman Turks, Roma, | Greeks, Armenians and Jews - as Northern Thrace. |
merchants; Genoese of Ottoman citizenship; and | Greeks, Armenians and Jews. |
rity status (and its entailed rights) given to | Greeks, Armenians, Assyrians and Jews. |
most severely were non-Muslims like the Jews, | Greeks, Armenians, and Levantines, who controlled a l |
ea was inhabited by the Siculi even before the | Greeks arrived on the Sicilian coast in 832 BC to fou |
through the reign of Cyrus, also called by the | Greeks, Artaxerxes. |
tion and ethnic conflict between Albanians and | Greeks, as well as opposition by Aromanians to the re |
speculative sciences, professed so much by the | Greeks as by the Romans.” |
Tahapanes or Tehaphnehes; known by the Ancient | Greeks as Daphnae, now Tell Defenneh) was a city in A |
xpulsion, aiming to forcibly Bulgarize as many | Greeks as possible and expel or kill the rest. |
who came to Antioch and began to speak to the | Greeks as well, proclaiming the Lord Jesus. |
It was known to the ancient | Greeks as "the fruit of the gods", or often referred |
giving the modes the names used by the ancient | Greeks as well as Boethius (Dorian, Phrygian, etc.) h |
The flower was supposedly used by the ancient | Greeks as a key ingredient in a love potion, hence th |
He was identified by the | Greeks as Hypsistos. |
t of the Indus, and known to Alexander and the | Greeks as Peukelaotis. |
t of the Indus, and known to Alexander and the | Greeks as Taxila. |
They were known by the | Greeks as gnomes, from the Greek word for "an opinion |
ngly with Kharkamis (Carchamish) (known to the | Greeks as Europos or Oropos), one of the capitals of |
At Ephesus, a goddess whom the | Greeks associated with Artemis was venerated in an ar |
n 1632 he also founded a college for unwealthy | Greeks at Padua in 1653. |
mans possessed a military that outnumbered the | Greeks at approximately ten to one. |
y feeling abandoned, and perhaps bribed by the | Greeks, Atenulf negotiated the ransom of Exaugustus a |
On August 26, the | Greeks attacked all along the line. |
The phrase "Beware | Greeks bearing gifts" refers to the Trojan horse desc |
Other notable | Greeks bearing the same name are noted at Eubulus. |
Although this work was widely read by | Greeks before the outbreak of the Greek War of Indepe |
predicted the Trojan War and prophesied to the | Greeks both that Troy would be destroyed and that Hom |
The Bactrian | Greeks built a new city (Peucela or Peucelaitis) at t |
ea, the last battle of the Greco-Persian Wars, | Greeks built a bronze column of three intertwined sna |
iographies and genealogy not only of Byzantine | Greeks, but also Bulgarians, Serbs, Albanians, Turks |
Electricity was known to the | Greeks, but it was after the Charterhouse schoolteach |
as was the honor and the security not only of | Greeks but of all persons on Greek territory; it esta |
of the Persian attack by an alliance with the | Greeks, but this hope failed, as the Cypriot towns an |
tronomical knowledge of the Babylonians to the | Greeks, but little is known about his work and nothin |
borrowed it either from the Celts or from the | Greeks, but the Romans were also influenced directly |
erican Committee for the Evangelization of the | Greeks by George Georgakis. |
Gandhara was acquired from the | Greeks by Chandragupta Maurya. |
Pontian | Greeks call them Τσαλκαλιδείς (Tsalkalideis); a name |
The | Greeks call a similar dish Tzatziki. |
The | Greeks call the Amaranthus blitum var. |
Its old Egyptian name was Pikuat; the | Greeks called it Kanobos, or Kanopos (Greek: Κάνωπος) |
one of the controversial treatises against the | Greeks, called forth by the encyclical letters of Pho |
this position straight using a circle that the | Greeks called horizon, the Latins limitans, because i |
The | Greeks called it Aethalia (fume) after the fumes of t |
Mardonius is killed in the battle and the | Greeks capture enormous amounts of loot. |
The | Greeks captured the town without a fight. |
the time made human sacrifices, including the | Greeks, Celts, and Romans. |
duin (who may also have been bought off by the | Greeks), chose their own successor to Argyrus, Willia |
Later when the | Greeks come to take her away, Polyxena asks Cassandra |
The ancient | Greeks considered geometry as just one of several sci |
at the request of Harold the Tall, though the | Greeks considered about and forbade it. |
roving which has never been seen since ancient | Greeks contributed their logic thinking in the world. |
a), and an active member of MGC (Multicultural | Greeks Council of UCI). |
attle was ultimately a military defeat for the | Greeks, Diakos's death provided the Greek national ca |
The | Greeks did not recognize her as a goddess: the undisp |
Egyptians practiced it on the Israelites; the | Greeks did likewise for the barbarians; the Romans se |
The ancient | Greeks did not recognize Canis Minor as a distinct co |
By 1000 B.C. the | Greeks did not yet use the alphabet rendering the all |
ious sources, several hundred thousand Ottoman | Greeks died during this period. |
The ancient | Greeks distinguished the destructive and consumptive |
ering the Ptolemies is a modern invention; the | Greeks distinguished them by nickname. |
ορδάτος) was the name of a family of Phanariot | Greeks, distinguished in the history of the Ottoman E |
The | Greeks do not normally celebrate an All-Night Vigil o |
k as great-grandparents), as opposed to native | Greeks due to their inexperience in a country where b |
order but was one of the units sent to aid the | Greeks during the Greco-Italian War, by this time equ |
l deaths of his parents at the hands of fellow | Greeks during the war and an opportunity arises to ta |
atics and science was built on the work of the | Greeks, Egyptians, Mesopotamians, Chinese, Indians an |
he astrological traditions of the Babylonians, | Greeks, Egyptians, Persians, Arabs, Western medieval |
for the red planet, and he was equated by the | Greeks either to the combative demigod Heracles (Lati |
Greeks embedded the arrival of wine making culture in | |
Ancient | Greeks employed Interpretatio Graeca whereby the gods |
Whatever it is, I fear the | Greeks, even bringing gifts.") |
eek football, he is considered one of the best | Greeks ever to play the game, and the last of a marve |
not having the real numbers, nor division, the | Greeks faced difficulties in defining rigorously the |
hthia and be there in "just three days" if the | Greeks fail to show him due respect. |
The | Greeks first challenged the supremacy of the Scots in |
learn of this plan and decide to apply to the | Greeks for help; Darios, who is forbidden to leave Rh |
n civil war until 1391 and exchanged the local | Greeks for Turkish settlers, thereby giving the Turks |
lly, the name of this tribe was adopted by the | Greeks for "Cyrenaica" as well as for northwestern Af |
'Ahrida' is one of the two names being used by | Greeks for the city of Ohrid. |
things difficult, but on the other, the modern | Greeks found out the ancient Greeks were right: A two |
Turkish population exchange removed the Pontic | Greeks from their homeland and resettled them in Gree |
of Tatarna took place the first battle of the | Greeks from Roumeli against the Turks during the stru |
n Tatar and Turkish population was replaced by | Greeks from the Archipelago. |
ans and Muslims) in Greece were resettled with | Greeks from Asia Minor, and the Balkans (mainly from |
ectuals, had been accepted and adopted by many | Greeks from the seventh century BC through commercial |
r conquests in Sicily and the expulsion of the | Greeks from the peninsula. |
mea by Russia, Catherine the Great ordered all | Greeks from the peninsula to settle in North Azov, an |
arthaginian-Etruscan alliance had expelled the | Greeks from Corsica after the Battle of Alalia. |
cognized appearance of the state, though other | Greeks from Ottoman territories had previously compet |
claim merit with him for having dissuaded the | Greeks from intercepting his flight. |
It is possible that | Greeks fused several rulers with similar name into a |
It is uncertain to what extent the | Greeks gods were thought to resemble their Slavic cou |
On May 21, the | Greeks governed and left the tiny port of Nafplio. |
ough these stars had been known to the ancient | Greeks, gradual precession had lowered them below the |
The insurrections of the Macedonian | Greeks had the support of King Otto of Greece who tho |
Greece were reoriented to the south, where the | Greeks had rebelled in early 1821. |
The screenplay was based on the plays The | Greeks Had a Word for It by Zoe Akins and Loco by Dal |
had a similar underworld called Aralu, and the | Greeks had one known as Hades. |
The Turkish army had lost 1,000 men while the | Greeks had lost several men. |
This was the first time | Greeks had governed themselves since the fall of Treb |
was precisely this human-dreamt world that the | Greeks had developed into perfection from the Homeric |
after the city was recaptured by the Byzantine | Greeks, half a century later. |
In the early summer of 1917, the | Greeks handed over Fort Rupel to the Bulgarians, beli |
tern metaphysics "since the beginning with the | Greeks has eminently been both ontology and theology. |
field in front of the gates of Troy, where the | Greeks have taken position. |
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