「OVID」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| The town was named after Newton | Ovid, a local resident. |
| ostly influenced by French models as well as by | Ovid; a second period during which his main inspirat |
| Ovid also calls him Titan, in fact "lumina Titan". | |
| inch gives for the classical myths are those in | Ovid and Virgil. |
| There is also a connection between | Ovid and Augustus' daughter, Julia, who was also exi |
| as mustered into Federal service at Port Huron, | Ovid, and Ypsilanti, Michigan on April 10, 1863. |
| nt Latin scholar, being acquainted with Cicero, | Ovid and other authors, and his spirit is rather tha |
| ished translations of the Heroycall Epistles of | Ovid, and of the Eglogs of Mantuan (Gianbattista Spa |
| Thanks to the literary renditions of | Ovid and Fulgentius it was a well-known myth through |
| He also published a commentary on | Ovid Ars Amatoria I (1970) and an edition of Fragmen |
| Ovid believed that the flame was fed from "fatty foo | |
| hich is generally the same as that recounted by | Ovid, but ends with Byblis hanging herself with her |
| Ovid Butler, founder of Butler University | |
| In Ancient Rome, Manilius and | Ovid called the constellation Litoreus (shore-inhabi |
| d two biographies, The Last Mafioso with author | Ovid Demaris and Vengeance is Mine with author Micha |
| likely he believed them more than the satirist | Ovid, for example. |
| Halsey was supervisor of the Town of | Ovid from 1794 to 1804, and was a member of the New |
| at college as a soprano singer, and lecture on | Ovid, Hellenistic poetry and Catullus. |
| Ovid, Ibis, line 517 (with scholiast noted by Graves | |
| a farm halfway between the villages of Lodi and | Ovid in the "Lake country" of western New York state |
| Greek myth of Ceyx and Alcyone as recounted by | Ovid in his Metamorphoses. |
| The story of Narcissus, told by the poet | Ovid in his Metamorphoses, is of a handsome youth wh |
| ent gods, which had been told by the Roman poet | Ovid in his Metamorphoses. |
| ilesian tales gained a reputation for ribaldry: | Ovid, in Tristia, contrasts the boldness of Aristide |
| plagiarism, noting Dylan's direct reference to | Ovid in the album's first song, "Thunder on the Moun |
| Ovid is a statutory town in Sedgwick County, Colorad | |
| his expert analysis of ancient authors such as | Ovid, Lucretius and Virgil. |
| In his longer narrative sections, | Ovid makes use of tragedy, epic poetry, elegy, and H |
| Ovid, Metamorphoses i.588-747 | |
| Ovid, Metamorphoses 9, 446-665 | |
| Coltrin was born in | Ovid, New York. |
| Born in | Ovid, New York, Burroughs completed a preparatory co |
| Ford's mother's family came from | Ovid, New York. |
| ordained minister of the Presbyterian church in | Ovid, New York. |
| g "The Stolen and Perverted Writings of Homer & | Ovid: of Plato & Cicero, which all Men ought to cont |
| On the Roman side, | Ovid particularly focuses on and employs Virgil's Ae |
| Venus and Adonis ( | Ovid poem), a poem from Ovid's Metamorphoses, possib |
| reely from John Dryden's English translation of | Ovid published in 1717, The Story of Acis, Polyphemu |
| Ovid R. Sellers. | |
| A similar theme is found in | Ovid regarding the Cumaean Sibyl. |
| But here, too, | Ovid retains his style and his discretion, avoiding |
| Ovid returns to the theme of war several times throu | |
| Ovid Rogers Sellers (August 12, 1884 - 1975) was an | |
| storical poetry as well as the annal tradition ( | Ovid says in the prologue that one of his sources ar |
| Ovid Sellers grew up on the campus of Wentworth Mili | |
| Her parentage was flexible: for | Ovid, she could equally be Pallantis, signifying the |
| Ovid tells the story of striges attacking the legend | |
| Ovid Teodorescu | |
| "Swift and | Ovid: The Development of Metasatire." |
| Ovid, the famous Roman poet, is almost always depict | |
| This Acoetes was, according to | Ovid, the son of a poor fisherman in Maeonia, who se |
| re is a good place to meet girls, for instance, | Ovid, the classically educated trickster, refers to |
| He was educated at the college in | Ovid, then at Union College in Schenectady, then, fr |
| The painting's subject is taken from | Ovid, though with modifications (Adonis leaves Venus |
| For some episodes, the sources | Ovid used are untraceable. |
| According to | Ovid, Vesta was indeed the Earth itself, the sacred |
| s could be the reason or part of the reason why | Ovid was banished from Rome. |
| In this, one of the most important works for | Ovid was Callimachus' Aetia; the use of divine inter |
| urrently indexed in: Scopus, EBSCOhost, PubMed, | Ovid, Web of Science, and SwetsWise. |
| n-Gale (Gale Group), Proquest, British Library, | Ovid, Web of Science, and SwetsWise. |
| He also wrote two poems in imitation of | Ovid, which were addressed to Pippin. |
| n Britten dedicated his Six Metamorphoses after | Ovid which she premiered at the Aldeburgh Festival i |
| Ovid will regularly deliberately pass over material | |
| acroix himself, was written: "Some examine him [ | Ovid] with interest, others go home and offer wild f |
| ife, or of knowledge they acquired after death: | Ovid writes of a marketplace in the underworld, wher |
| Ovid wrote that the river flowed through the cave of | |
| tion of two of the books, dated to around 1 BC, | Ovid wrote the third dealing with the same themes fr |
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