English-Wörter für 'A Roman consul.'
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noun
- (historical) A senator of Ancient Rome.
- (Christianity) One of the chief ecclesiastical authorities of the first centuries after Christ.
- A title given to the personification of a force of nature or abstract concept, such as Father Time or Father Frost.
- (Christianity) A title given to priests.
- (Christianity) any of about 70 theologians in the period from the 2nd to the 7th century whose writing established and confirmed official church doctrine; in the Roman Catholic Church some were later declared saints and became Doctor of the Church; the best known Latin Church Fathers are Ambrose, Augustine, Gregory the Great, and Jerome; those who wrote in Greek include Athanasius, Basil, Gregory Nazianzen, and John Chrysostom
- ‘Father’ is a term of address for priests in some churches (especially the Roman Catholic Church or the Orthodox Catholic Church); ‘Padre’ is frequently used in the military
name
name
name
noun
- (originally) A consul in command of the army.
- an annually elected magistrate of the ancient Roman Republic
- (historical, translating Italian "pretore") The title of the chief magistrate, the mayor, and/or the podestà in Palermo, in Verona, and in various other parts of 17th- and 18th-century Italy.
- (by extension) A high civic or administrative official, especially a chief magistrate or mayor. Sometimes used as a title.
- (after 366 BC) An annually-elected curule magistrate, subordinate to the consuls in provincial administration, and who performed some of their duties; numbering initially only one, later two (either of the praetor urbānus (“urban praetor”) or the praetor peregrīnus (“peregrine praetor”)), and eventually eighteen.
noun
- (Ancient Rome) The governor of a small imperial province.
- A legal officer who both investigates and prosecutes crimes, found in some inquisitorial legal systems, particularly communist or formerly communist states – see public procurator
- An agent or attorney.
- A tax collector.
- (ancient Rome) someone employed by the Roman Emperor to manage finance and taxes
- a person authorized to act for another
name
- The Roman Republic.
- A small city, the county seat of Ferry County, Washington, United States.
- An unincorporated community and census-designated place in Fayette County, Pennsylvania, United States.
- An unincorporated community in Kanawha County, West Virginia, United States.
- A city in Christian County and Greene County, Missouri, United States.
- An unincorporated community and census-designated place in Marquette County, Michigan, United States.
- A small city in Republic County, Kansas, United States.
- A village in Seneca County, Ohio, United States.
noun
- (ancient Rome) an official elected by the plebeians to protect their interests
- (historical) An elected official in Ancient Rome, a tribune of the plebs.
- the apse of a Christian church that contains the bishop's throne
- (historical) A military officer in Ancient Rome ranking below a legate and above a centurion, a military tribune.
- (Christianity, architecture) The domed or vaulted apse in a cathedral housing the bishop's throne (see).
- (figurative) A protector of the people; a public figure who appeals to and on behalf of the people through oratory.
- (uncommon) Synonym of pulpit, a platform, a place or opportunity to express one's opinion
noun
- a viceroy who governed a large province in the Roman Empire
- a bishop in eastern Christendom who holds a place below a patriarch but above a metropolitan
- a bishop in one of several Eastern Orthodox Churches in North America
- In the Eastern Christian Churches, the deputy of a patriarch, or a bishop who holds authority over other bishops without being a patriarch.
- In these same churches, a bishop appointed over a group of the faithful not yet large enough or organized enough to constitute an eparchy or diocese.
- (historical) In the Byzantine Empire, a governor of a distant province.
adj
noun
noun
noun
- an inhabitant of the ancient Roman Empire
- a resident of modern Rome
- A native or resident of Rome.
- (uncountable) The Roman script.
- (historical) A native or resident of the Roman Empire.
- (historical, historiography) A native or resident of the Byzantine Empire.
- (printing, countable) A single letter or character in Roman type.
adj
- of or relating to or derived from Rome (especially ancient Rome)
- characteristic of the modern type that most directly represents the type used in ancient Roman inscriptions
- of or relating to or supporting Romanism
- Of noble countenance but with little facial expression.
- (historical) Of or from the Roman Empire.
- (historical, historiography) Of or from the Byzantine Empire.
- Of or pertaining to the Roman Catholic Church or the Holy See.
- Of or from Rome.
- (of type or text) Supporting the characters of the Latin alphabet.
- (architecture) Of a style characterised by the size and boldness of its round arches and vaults, and having baths, aqueducts, basilicas, amphitheatres, etc.
- (typography) A font that is upright, as opposed to oblique or italic. (See roman font.)
- (law, colloquial) Used to distinguish a Roman numeral from an Arabic numeral in oral discourse.
name
noun
- any of various important officials in ancient Rome
- (Middle Ages) the lord of a palatinate who exercised sovereign powers over his lands
- either of two irregularly shaped bones that form the back of the hard palate and helps to form the nasal cavity and the floor of the orbits
- (historical) Ellipsis of county palatine.
- (historical) A fur cape or stole worn by women, which covers the neck and shoulders.
- (in the plural, historical) The Roman soldiers of the imperial palace.
- (anatomy) Ellipsis of palatine bone.
- Ellipsis of count palatine, a feudal lord or a bishop possessing palatine powers.
- A palace official, especially in an imperial palace.
adj
- relating to or lying near the palate
- of or relating to a palace
- of or relating to a count palatine and the palatine's royal prerogatives
- Of or relating to a palace especially of a Roman or Holy Roman Emperor.
- (anatomy) Of or relating to the palate or to a palatine bone.
- Subject to palatine authority. (of a territory)
- (historical) (of an official or feudal lord) Having local authority and possessing royal privileges that elsewhere belongs only to a sovereign.
- Synonym of palatial.
noun
noun
- (historical) A member of the ancient Roman Senate.
- A member of the ruler’s council or governing council in general, a leading statesman.
- A member, normally elected, in the house or chamber of a legislature called a senate, as, for instance, the legislatures of the United States and Canada.
- In Germany, a minister of the executive branch of government in the city states of Berlin, Bremen, and Hamburg; and a government official of cities that were part of the Hanseatic League.
- (historical) A member of a governing council in other states in the ancient world.
- a member of a senate
adj
name
noun
noun
noun
- the first name of a citizen of ancient Rome
- (historical) An Ancient Roman given name.
- (historical) The throne name of a pharaoh, the fourth of the five names of the royal titulary, traditionally encircled by a cartouche and preceded by the title nswt-bjtj.
- (zoology) The genus name in a binomial scientific name.
noun
- A diplomat.
- (poetry) Alternative spelling of envoi (“short stanza at end of poem”).
- A messenger.
- (law) A diplomatic agent of the second rank, next in status after an ambassador.
- A representative.
- a brief stanza concluding certain forms of poetry
- someone sent on a mission to represent the interests of someone else
- a diplomat having less authority than an ambassador
name
- The Roman statesman and orator Mārcus Tullius Cicerō (106–43 BC).
- An unincorporated community in Sumner County, Kansas.
- An extinct town in Defiance County, Ohio.
- A surname.
- A town in Hamilton County, Indiana.
- A town in Onondaga County, New York.
- A town and unincorporated community in Outagamie County, Wisconsin.
- A town in Cook County, Illinois.
noun
- (historical) An Ancient Roman official responsible for public revenue and other financial affairs.
- (historical) In the Middle Ages, an officer who announced indulgences.
- (historical) The Quaestor sacri palatii of the late Roman Empire and Byzantium; first generally a legislator, then judicial official, and eventually an honorary title by the 14th century.
- any of several public officials of ancient Rome (usually in charge of finance and administration)
noun
- (historical) A senator of Ancient Rome.
- (Christianity) One of the chief ecclesiastical authorities of the first centuries after Christ.
- A title given to the personification of a force of nature or abstract concept, such as Father Time or Father Frost.
- (Christianity) A title given to priests.
- (Christianity) any of about 70 theologians in the period from the 2nd to the 7th century whose writing established and confirmed official church doctrine; in the Roman Catholic Church some were later declared saints and became Doctor of the Church; the best known Latin Church Fathers are Ambrose, Augustine, Gregory the Great, and Jerome; those who wrote in Greek include Athanasius, Basil, Gregory Nazianzen, and John Chrysostom
- ‘Father’ is a term of address for priests in some churches (especially the Roman Catholic Church or the Orthodox Catholic Church); ‘Padre’ is frequently used in the military
name
noun
- (originally) A consul in command of the army.
- an annually elected magistrate of the ancient Roman Republic
- (historical, translating Italian "pretore") The title of the chief magistrate, the mayor, and/or the podestà in Palermo, in Verona, and in various other parts of 17th- and 18th-century Italy.
- (by extension) A high civic or administrative official, especially a chief magistrate or mayor. Sometimes used as a title.
- (after 366 BC) An annually-elected curule magistrate, subordinate to the consuls in provincial administration, and who performed some of their duties; numbering initially only one, later two (either of the praetor urbānus (“urban praetor”) or the praetor peregrīnus (“peregrine praetor”)), and eventually eighteen.
noun
- (Ancient Rome) The governor of a small imperial province.
- A legal officer who both investigates and prosecutes crimes, found in some inquisitorial legal systems, particularly communist or formerly communist states – see public procurator
- An agent or attorney.
- A tax collector.
- (ancient Rome) someone employed by the Roman Emperor to manage finance and taxes
- a person authorized to act for another
noun
- (ancient Rome) an official elected by the plebeians to protect their interests
- (historical) An elected official in Ancient Rome, a tribune of the plebs.
- the apse of a Christian church that contains the bishop's throne
- (historical) A military officer in Ancient Rome ranking below a legate and above a centurion, a military tribune.
- (Christianity, architecture) The domed or vaulted apse in a cathedral housing the bishop's throne (see).
- (figurative) A protector of the people; a public figure who appeals to and on behalf of the people through oratory.
- (uncommon) Synonym of pulpit, a platform, a place or opportunity to express one's opinion
noun
- a viceroy who governed a large province in the Roman Empire
- a bishop in eastern Christendom who holds a place below a patriarch but above a metropolitan
- a bishop in one of several Eastern Orthodox Churches in North America
- In the Eastern Christian Churches, the deputy of a patriarch, or a bishop who holds authority over other bishops without being a patriarch.
- In these same churches, a bishop appointed over a group of the faithful not yet large enough or organized enough to constitute an eparchy or diocese.
- (historical) In the Byzantine Empire, a governor of a distant province.
noun
noun
- an inhabitant of the ancient Roman Empire
- a resident of modern Rome
- A native or resident of Rome.
- (uncountable) The Roman script.
- (historical) A native or resident of the Roman Empire.
- (historical, historiography) A native or resident of the Byzantine Empire.
- (printing, countable) A single letter or character in Roman type.
adj
- of or relating to or derived from Rome (especially ancient Rome)
- characteristic of the modern type that most directly represents the type used in ancient Roman inscriptions
- of or relating to or supporting Romanism
- Of noble countenance but with little facial expression.
- (historical) Of or from the Roman Empire.
- (historical, historiography) Of or from the Byzantine Empire.
- Of or pertaining to the Roman Catholic Church or the Holy See.
- Of or from Rome.
- (of type or text) Supporting the characters of the Latin alphabet.
- (architecture) Of a style characterised by the size and boldness of its round arches and vaults, and having baths, aqueducts, basilicas, amphitheatres, etc.
- (typography) A font that is upright, as opposed to oblique or italic. (See roman font.)
- (law, colloquial) Used to distinguish a Roman numeral from an Arabic numeral in oral discourse.
name
noun
- any of various important officials in ancient Rome
- (Middle Ages) the lord of a palatinate who exercised sovereign powers over his lands
- either of two irregularly shaped bones that form the back of the hard palate and helps to form the nasal cavity and the floor of the orbits
- (historical) Ellipsis of county palatine.
- (historical) A fur cape or stole worn by women, which covers the neck and shoulders.
- (in the plural, historical) The Roman soldiers of the imperial palace.
- (anatomy) Ellipsis of palatine bone.
- Ellipsis of count palatine, a feudal lord or a bishop possessing palatine powers.
- A palace official, especially in an imperial palace.
adj
- relating to or lying near the palate
- of or relating to a palace
- of or relating to a count palatine and the palatine's royal prerogatives
- Of or relating to a palace especially of a Roman or Holy Roman Emperor.
- (anatomy) Of or relating to the palate or to a palatine bone.
- Subject to palatine authority. (of a territory)
- (historical) (of an official or feudal lord) Having local authority and possessing royal privileges that elsewhere belongs only to a sovereign.
- Synonym of palatial.
noun
noun
- (historical) A member of the ancient Roman Senate.
- A member of the ruler’s council or governing council in general, a leading statesman.
- A member, normally elected, in the house or chamber of a legislature called a senate, as, for instance, the legislatures of the United States and Canada.
- In Germany, a minister of the executive branch of government in the city states of Berlin, Bremen, and Hamburg; and a government official of cities that were part of the Hanseatic League.
- (historical) A member of a governing council in other states in the ancient world.
- a member of a senate
noun
noun
- the first name of a citizen of ancient Rome
- (historical) An Ancient Roman given name.
- (historical) The throne name of a pharaoh, the fourth of the five names of the royal titulary, traditionally encircled by a cartouche and preceded by the title nswt-bjtj.
- (zoology) The genus name in a binomial scientific name.
noun
- A diplomat.
- (poetry) Alternative spelling of envoi (“short stanza at end of poem”).
- A messenger.
- (law) A diplomatic agent of the second rank, next in status after an ambassador.
- A representative.
- a brief stanza concluding certain forms of poetry
- someone sent on a mission to represent the interests of someone else
- a diplomat having less authority than an ambassador
noun
- (historical) An Ancient Roman official responsible for public revenue and other financial affairs.
- (historical) In the Middle Ages, an officer who announced indulgences.
- (historical) The Quaestor sacri palatii of the late Roman Empire and Byzantium; first generally a legislator, then judicial official, and eventually an honorary title by the 14th century.
- any of several public officials of ancient Rome (usually in charge of finance and administration)
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