Examples of using Varro in English and their translations into Hebrew
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Programming
For Varro?
Varro was as a brother.
She lives, varro.
Varro has stood to a draw!
Where were you, Varro?
Varro possessed a fine eye.
May I suggest Varro?
Varro. The die call your name!
Nothings changed, Varro.
Varro would like to speak with you.
This is my Lieutenant, varro.
Not since varro was taken from me by your hand.
Do not forget why you are here, varro.
Varro was no match for the Champion of Capua.
Put him from misery, as you did Varro--.
This is Varro, one of our remaining Alliance guests.
Did it form the words that robbed varro of his life?
Gaius Terentius Varro Rooms delegate in Spain.
Varro. I'm of a winning mind. Save your words of caution.
I haven't heard anything since Varro and his team went down.
Varro left this world a gladiator. And shall be remembered as such.
Six months later, his true ambition, Varro was Consul.
Varro would hoist him upon his shoulders and he would stretch his hands out, attempting to wrest it from the heavens.
Computer, open a channel to Varro ship, Segment 16, Station 204.
He gives much better showing against Spartacus than the fool varro.
Varro mentions the Capitolium Vetus, an earlier cult site on the Quirinal, devoted to Jupiter, Juno and Minerva, among whom Martial makes a distinction between the"old Jupiter" and the"new".
One of the most learnedwriters of the period was Marcus Terentius Varro.
Cornelius Labeo was an ancient Roman theologian and antiquarian who wrote on such topics as the Roman calendar and the teachings of Etruscan religion(Etrusca disciplina). His works survive only in fragments and testimonia. He has been dated"plausibly but not provably" to the 3rd century AD.[1]Labeo has been called"the most important Roman theologian" after Varro, whose work seems to have influenced him strongly.[2] He is usually considered a Neoplatonist.[3].
The familiar subject had already beentreated in Latin verse in the popular version of Varro Atacinus.
Servius set his face against the prevalent allegorical methods of exposition of text. For the antiquarian and the historian, the abiding value of his work lies in his preservation of facts in Roman history, religion, antiquities and language, which but for him might have perished.Not a little of the laborious erudition of Varro and other ancient scholars has survived in his pages.