The Germania And Agricola And Also Selections From the Annals of Tacitus

Cover The Germania And Agricola And Also Selections From the Annals of Tacitus
The Germania And Agricola And Also Selections From the Annals of Tacitus
Terence
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, sedes junctas inter se. He speaks first of the indi- vidual abodes, and then, shortly after, of the vici, or villages. — Colunt dis* creti ac diver si. " They dwell separate and scattered. " — Ut fons, ut campus.
H2 178 NOTES ON THE [ciIAP. XVII.
&c. Traces of this early mode of dwelling remain in the endings of the names of many towns and villages, such as Born (spring), Bach (brook), Feld (field), Wald (wood), Hayn (grove), Berg (mountain), &c. — Connexis et coharentibus cedificiis. " With
...the buildings adjoining one another and running on in rows. " — Ccementorum. " Of building stone. " Caementa are, properly, the chips made in hewing stones (from ccsdo). The term is, then, applied to any kind of hewn stone for building purposes. — Materia. " Tim ber. " — Citra speciem aut delectationem. U Without any thing pleasing to the eye, or calculated to attract. " The meaning is, that they took no pains to make it look well. Citra implies a stopping short of something : it could not have been used if they had taken pains to make it ugly.

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