Cicero
suomi-englanti sanakirjaCicero englannista suomeksi
Cicero
Substantiivi
Cicero englanniksi
cicero
The Roman statesman and orator Mārcus Tullius Cicerō (106–43 BC).
(syn)
(quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) Shakespeare Society|year_published=1853|page=15|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/b24975436/page/15/mode/1up|oclc=28135116|passage=But I perceiue nowe that all red colloured stones are not Rubies, nether is euery one Alexander that hath a stare in his cheke, al lame men are not Vulcans, nor hooke nosed men Ciceroes, nether each professor a poet.
(quote-book) Fenimore Cooper|chapter=VII|title=Wing-and-Wing|The Jack O’Lantern; (Le Feu-Follet;) or, The Privateer.(nb...)|volume=I|location=London|publisher=Bentley (publisher)|Richard Bentley,(nb...)|page=207|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/jackolanternlefe01cooprich/page/207/mode/1up|oclc=197413222|passage=“(...) Still, I wish I knew something of this Sir Cicero; for, to be frank with thee, I have even foregone my siesta in searching the books in quest of such a man.” “And do they not confirm every syllable the Signor Smees has said?” “So far from it that I do not even find the name. It is true, several distinguished orators of that nation are styled ''English'' Ciceroes; but then all people do this by way of commendation.”
(quote-book)
(quote-journal)|journal=Athenaeum (British magazine)|The Athenæum: Journal of Literature, Science, the Fine Arts, Music, and the Drama|issue=3277|location=London|publisher=(...) Francis (publisher)|John C. Francis,(nb...)|date=16 August 1890|page=230|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/sim_athenaeum-uk_july-december-1890/page/230/mode/1up|column=3|passage=(..) Baccelli|(quote-gloss) Baccelli once more in elegant and fluent Latin delivered a grand eulogy on Prof. Virchow|(quote-gloss) Virchow, who then likewise replied in fluent Latin. An embrace and a kiss of the two Cicerones concluded the tenth Congress, which as far as the number of visitors goes surpasses all the previous records; (..)
(surname).
(quote-book)|volume=I|location=London|publisher=(...) T(quote-gloss) Waller,(nb...)|year=1752|pages=274 (book V, epistle XVIII) and 406 (book VII, epistle XVIII)|passage=Our two ''Cicerones'' (quote-gloss) are with ''Dejotarus'', but if there ſhould be Occaſion, they can be conveyed to ''Rhodes''. (..) ON the 2d of ''February'' my Wife and Daughter came to ''Formiæ'', and inform’d me of al your very obliging Behaviour, and good Offices in their Behalf. I am willing they ſhould continue at ''Formiæ'', together with the two young ''Cicerones'', until we know whether we are to embrace a ſcandalous Peace or a deſtructive War.
(quote-book) St. John Parry|title=Ciceronis Epistolarum Delectus: A Selection from Cicero’s Letters Illustrating the Contemporary History of Rome. With Notes and Introductions.|location=London|publisher=Longmans, Green, and Co.|year=1867|page=271|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/ciceronisepisto00cicegoog/page/n283/mode/1up|passage=He (quote-gloss) was tutor to the two young Cicerones (quote-gloss). (..) The two young Cicerones accompanied their parents, and were placed under the charge of Deiotarus.
(quote-journal) is also descended from the Cicero family. (..) The Ciceroes owned the Grapeco Bottling Company.
(quote-book) until September of 45 (smallcaps)|title=The October Horse|series=Masters of Rome|seriesvolume=6|location=London|publisher=Century|year=2002|section=section 3|pages=384–385|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/octoberhorse0000mccu_c4o7/page/384/mode/1up|isbn=0 712 68056 X|passage=All in all, he (quote-gloss) reflected, the two Cicerones (quote-gloss) had not had happy marriages; they had been obliged to marry for money, to heiresses. (..) The pity of it was that both women loved their Cicerones; they just didn’t know how to show it, and were, besides, frugal women who deplored the Ciceronian tendency to spend money.
(place):
(place).
Former name: (l)
(l)
cicero, the 5th of the 7 traditional German sizes of type, between Korpus and Mittel, standardized as 12 point.
(surname)
(non-gloss), a Roman statesman, writer, and orator