Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. Check out and contribute to the discussion of this word!
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word navium.
Examples
-
Pompeius, disposito per omnes maris recessus navium praesidio, brevi terrarum orbem illa peste liberavit; praedones multis locis victos fudit; eosdem in deditionem acceptos in urbibus et agris procul a mari collocavit.
Cheeseburger Gothic » Now that’s how you deal with pirates. 2009
-
Note 43: Albrici monachi Trium-Fontium Chronicon, p. 640: "Qui cum essent navium rectores, debebant sicut eis promiserant causa Dei, absque pretio eos conducere ultra mare." back
A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries 2005
-
Zebulon in portu marium habitabit, et erit in portum navium, et terminus ejus usque ad Sidon.
Commentary on Genesis - Volume 2 1509-1564 1996
-
_ "Quarum navium Lundonienses quasdam Lundoniam vehunt, quasdam vero penitus confringunt." —
-
Ceterum adhuc aedificia Numidarum agrestium, quae mapalia illi vocant, oblonga, incurvis lateribus tecta, quasi navium carinae sunt.
C. Sallusti Crispi De Bello Catilinario Et Jugurthino 86 BC-34? BC Sallust
-
Oceanum magis; hique alveos navium inverses pro tuguriis habuere, quia neque materia in agris neque ab Hispanis emundi aut mutandi copia erat; mare magnum et ignara [127] lingua commercia prohibebant.
C. Sallusti Crispi De Bello Catilinario Et Jugurthino 86 BC-34? BC Sallust
-
Sallustium Crispum praetorem ad Cercinam insulam versus, quam adversarii tenebant, cum parte navium ire iubet. '
The Student's Companion to Latin Authors Thomas Ross Mills
-
Claudius triremes quadriremesque et undeviginti hominum millia armavit, cincto _ratibus_ ambitu, ne vaga effugia forent; _ac_ tamen spatium amplexus, ad _vim_ remigii, gubernantium artes, impetus _navium_, et _proelio_ solita.
Tacitus and Bracciolini The Annals Forged in the XVth Century John Wilson Ross 1852
-
Adverting, however, to this otherwise invaluable return, we learn from it that Edward the Confessor was accustomed to demand from the citizens of Gloucester, "thirty-six dicres of iron, and a hundred elongated iron rods for bolts for the king's ships," -- (xxxvi. dicras ferri & c. virgas ferreas ductiles ad clavos navium Regis).
-
Tiberis ... quamlibet magnorum navium ex Italo mari capax, rerum in toto orbe nascentium mercator placidissimus, pluribus probe solus quam ceteri in omnibus terris amnes accolitur aspiciturque villis.
Corinne, Volume 1 (of 2) Or Italy R. S. [Illustrator] Greig 1791
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.