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Page "Robert Estienne" ¶ 10
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fine and edition
The first two are among the neatest Greek texts known, and are called O mirificam ; the third is a splendid masterpiece of typographical skill, and is known as the Editio Regia ; the edition of 1551 contains the Latin translation of Erasmus and the Vulgate, is not nearly as fine as the other three, and is exceedingly rare.
The terms special edition, limited edition and variants such as deluxe edition, collector's edition and others, fall under the category of manufactured collectable and are used as a marketing incentive for various kinds of products, originally published products related to the arts, such as books, prints or recorded music and films, but now including cars, fine wine and other collectables.
The 1607 edition included for the first time a full set of English county maps, based on the surveys of Christopher Saxton and John Norden, and engraved by William Kip and William Hole ( who also engraved the fine title page ).
In his first edition, Calthorpe allowed that Cardigan's horse may have bolted, but later editions pointedly stated the earl was too fine a horseman for this to be a satisfactory explanation.
Phillips wrote many occasional essays on the fine arts, especially for Rees's " Cyclopaedia ", and also a memoir of William Hogarth for John Nichols's edition of that artist's " Works ", 1808-17.
David Herd ( 1732 – 1810 ), the collector of the classic edition of Ancient and Modern Scottish Songs ( 1776 ), was " sovereign " of the Cape ( in which he was known as " Sir Scrape ") when Fergusson was dubbed a knight of the order, with the title of " Sir Precentor ", in allusion to his fine voice.
His defence, at first only a pamphlet, became in its third edition a lengthy treatise entitled Inquiry into the Relation of Cause and Effect, and is a fine specimen of Brown's analytical faculty.
In 1941, Heritage Press produced a " fine book " edition of Aesop, translated and adapted by Munro Leaf as juvenalia and lavishly illustrated by Robert Lawson.
The book received an enthusiastic response from the very early days, as characterized by the statement of George Pirkhamer, the prior of Nuremberg regarding the 1494 edition: " Nothing more holy, nothing more honorable, nothing more religious, nothing in fine more profitable for the Christian commonweal can you ever do than to make known these works of Thomas à Kempis.
A group of translators, who had the good fortune of being able to avail themselves of Buckley's fine edition, succeeded in bringing out all at the same time a translation in sixteen volumes ( De Thou, Histoire universelle, Fr.
In 1763 Richard Chandler published a fine edition of the inscriptions as Arundelian Marbles, Marmora Oxoniensia with a Latin translation, and a number of suggestions for supplying the lacunae.
Entertainment Weekly gave it an " A " rating and called it a " fine edition grants this enduring cult classic the DVD treatment it deserves ".
The 2012 edition hosted a variety of events including an online treasure hunt, fashion shows, rock competitions, and contests of dance, drama, fine arts and quizzing.
In a second edition of this work, published in two volumes in 1896, Schäffle emphasized the vaguely socialist implications of his work, describing the economy of the " rational social state " in fine detail.
" The same edition of the Glasgow Herald summarised the car as " a fine motorway cruiser, with unexpectedly good handling around the lanes, and masses of space for passengers and luggage.
* Mechon Mamre provides an online edition of the Tanakh according to the Aleppo Codex and other Tiberian manuscripts close to it, basing its reconstruction of the text on the methods of the Rav Mordechai Breuer ( but claims to differ from the Rav Breuer's texts as published in some fine details ).
Offset printing superseded chromolithography around the 1930s, yet stone and metal plate lithography continue to be used by artists in the production of fine arts posters and limited edition prints.
George J. Adler's American edition is an extensive revision of Ollendorff's first attempt, including grammar ; this version of the Ollendorff text has 600 pages of very fine print, with copious exercises.
The method of least squares had been introduced into geodesy by Gauss and Helmert wrote a fine book on least squares ( 1872, with a second edition in 1907 ) in this tradition.

fine and Latin
I must have written to say how much I had enjoyed his fine book The Building Of Eternal Rome, and I found he had not regretted giving me the highest mark in his old course on the later Latin poets, although in my final examination I had ignored the questions and filled the bluebook with a comparison of Propertius and Coleridge.
At the end of this article, loss of fine distinctions in the translations as compared to the original Latin text is discussed.
Hominy can be ground coarsely to make hominy grits, or into a fine mash ( dough ) to make masa, a dough used regularly in Latin American cuisine.
Pencil, from Old French pincel, a small paintbrush, from Latin a " little tail " ( see penis — pincellus is Latin from the post-classical period ) is an artist's fine brush of camel hair, also used for writing before modern lead or chalk pencils ; the meaning of " graphite writing implement " apparently evolved late in the 16th century.
" Most notable early medieval Polish works in Latin and the Old Polish language include the oldest extant manuscript of fine prose in the Polish language entitled the Holy Cross Sermons, as well as the earliest Polish-language Bible of Queen Zofia and the Chronicle of Janko of Czarnków from the 14th century, not to mention the Puławy Psalter.
A sundial in the front garden records the visit in fine Latin verse.
Feudal baronies had always been hereditable by an eldest son under primogeniture, but on condition of payment of a fine termed " relief ", derived from the Latin verb levo to lift up, meaning a " re-elevation " to a former position of honour.
It was renamed to Alcona County on March 8, 1843, after a neologism manufactured by Henry Schoolcraft from parts of words from Native American languages, plus Arabic, Greek and Latin, which were amalgamated to mean " fine or excellent plain ".
Nonius is the Latin name of the Portuguese astronomer and mathematician Pedro Nunes ( 1502 – 1578 ) who in 1542 invented a related but different system for taking fine measurements on the astrolabe that was a precursor to the vernier.
In the late 2000s, Union City, West New York, Weehawken and North Bergen came to be dubbed collectively as " NoHu ", a North Hudson haven for local performing and fine artists, many of whom are immigrants from Latin America and other countries, in part due to lower housing costs compared to those in nearby art havens such as Hoboken, Jersey City and Manhattan.
In the late 2000s, West New York, Weehawken, Union City and North Bergen came to be dubbed collectively as " NoHu ", a North Hudson haven for local performing and fine artists, many of whom are immigrants from Latin America and other countries, in part due to lower housing costs compared to those in nearby art havens such as Hoboken, Jersey City and Manhattan.
Courses include religion, English, math, science, social studies, fine arts, and foreign languages including an extensive Latin program.
Classical Latin damnum means " damage, cost, expense ; penalty, fine ", ultimately from a PIE root * dap -.
He was endowed with a fine intellect and a noble disposition ; he had received an excellent education at the hands of Simeon Polotsky, the most learned Slavonic monk of the day, knew Polish, and even possessed the unusual accomplishment of Latin ; but, horribly disfigured and half paralyzed by a mysterious disease, supposed to be scurvy, he had been disabled from his birth.
The latter concerns the fates of the " hairy ones " ( i. e. The Caesars-from the Latin word " caesar ", meaning " a fine head of hair ") who are to rule Rome.
This standard was replaced by a law of June 26, 1864, only to be restored on October 19, 1868, when the Latin Monetary Union system was formally adopted, with the peseta weighing 5. 000 g, 0. 835 fine ( 4. 175 g fine silver ), and a duro or five-peseta piece weighing 25. 000 g, 0. 900 fine ( 22. 500 g fine silver ).
The word derives from Latin harena, a particularly fine / smooth sand used to absorb blood in ancient arenas like the Colosseum in Rome.
In Classical Latin, the combination AE denotes the diphthong, which had a value similar to the long i in fine as pronounced in most dialects of modern English.

fine and Bible
Until they reached Canaan, the Israelites are implied by some passages in the Bible to have eaten only manna during their desert sojourn, despite the availability of milk and meat from the livestock with which they traveled, and the references to provisions of fine flour, oil, and meat, in parts of the journey's narrative.
" An exceedingly fine and valuable textile fibre and fabric known to the ancients ; apparently the word was used, or misused, of various substances, linen, cotton, and silk, but it denoted properly ( as shown by recent microscopic examination of mummy-cloths, which according to Herodotus were made of βύσσος ) a kind of flax, and hence is appropriately translated in the English Bible ' fine linen '.
The library's collections include exquisite medieval illuminated manuscripts, examples of early European printing including a fine paper copy of the Gutenberg Bible and books printed by William Caxton, and personal papers of distinguished historical figures including Elizabeth Gaskell, John Dalton and John Wesley.
The Bishop's Bible is notable for the note at Psalm xlv. 9: " Ophir is thought to be the Ilande in the west coast, of late found by Christopher Columbo, from whence at this day is brought most fine gold ".
The archives, now national property, include fine incunabula, documents and manuscripts of great value ( including the Codex Legum Longobardorum of 1004 and the La Cava Bible ).
Even the Bible does not lack for words that are frowned upon in fine society.
Among the fine productions of his printing shop is an undated edition of the Latin Bible in two volumes.
While the Hebrew text of the Bible only required a fine for the loss of a fetus, whatever its stage of development, the Greek Septuagint ( LXX ) translation of the Hebrew text, a pre-Christian translation that the early Christians used, introduced a distinction between a formed and an unformed fetus and treated destruction of the former as murder.

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