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Alphabetical [« »] rolling 1 rolls 2 roma 1 roman 69 romani 1 romania 3 romanised 1 | Frequency [« »] 70 vi 70 work 69 apollo 69 roman 68 same 67 58 67 always | Publius Ovidius Naso Poems from Exile Concordances roman |
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1 T-II| only they love the name of Roman,~by our country, of which 2 T-II| Justice forbids any man of Roman blood~to suffer barbarian 3 T-II| Book TII:421-470 His Plea: Roman Precedents~ ~I’ll not defend 4 T-II| so many foreign weapons,~Roman books too have plenty of 5 T-III| Samos’s words are true,~a Roman will wander among Sarmatian 6 T-III| of prayers made to our Roman Jupiter, and that you~rebellious 7 T-IV| Offering her proud neck to the Roman axe~she wears chains on 8 T-IV| bettered by no other in the Roman forum -~little though I 9 T-V| security~of all the gods of the Roman people is assured,~O glory, 10 T-V| Latin while speaking.~I, the Roman poet – forgive me, Muses! –~ 11 ExII| chief eloquence of the Roman language,~in mercy, take 12 ExII| t delight in me, or any Roman, being taken~by the enemy, 13 ExI| spears,~the buildings of the Roman forum gilded~by the gold 14 ExI| son, Tiberius, extends the Roman Empire:~Germanicus, by his 15 Ind| passage.~ ~Accius (Lucius)~A Roman tragic poet, born c170BC 16 Ind| Marcus)~Mark Antony, the Roman general and triumvir, who 17 Ind| Appia (Via)~The first great Roman Road from Rome to Capua ( 18 Ind| lyre.~Book TV.II:45-79 The Roman people.~Book EI.II:53-100 19 Ind| people.~Book EI.II:53-100 The Roman military machine.~Book EIV. 20 Ind| land on the border of the Roman area.~ ~Bato~A Dalmatian, 21 Ind| for Ulysses.~ ~Camena~A Roman term for Muse.~ ~Camerinus~ 22 Ind| Marcius Portius Cato), the Roman grammarian and poet an older 23 Ind| Caius Valerius Catullus the Roman lyric poet (c.87-c54BC) 24 Ind| Danube region.~ ~Claudia~The Roman woman, Claudia Quinta, a 25 Ind| It was destroyed by the Roman general Mummius in 146BC 26 Ind| Julius Caesar in 44BC as a Roman colony.~Book TI.X:1-50 The 27 Ind| from there.~ ~Cornificius~A Roman erotic poet, possibly Quintus 28 Ind| Identified with Ops the Roman goddess of plenty.~Book 29 Ind| and feathers.~ ~Dalmatia~A Roman province bordering the eastern 30 Ind| 75-126 Separated out from Roman Illyricum after the Pannonian 31 Ind| Calabria, the important early Roman poet and tragedian. His 32 Ind| The Danube delta was the Roman boundary on the west coast.~ 33 Ind| The Parcae were originally Roman goddesses of childbearing 34 Ind| Via~The Flaminian Way, the Roman road, ran from Rome to Ariminum ( 35 Ind| contemporaries.~ ~Fortuna~The Roman goddess of Fortune, Chance 36 Ind| Egypt (Cassius Dio: The Roman History 51.9 and 17). However 37 Ind| Cannae when Hannibal sent ten Roman survivors under oath to 38 Ind| established a rule that Roman soldiers must conquer or 39 Ind| the field. (Polybius The Roman History VI.57)~ ~Harpagus~ 40 Ind| Greek myth) or Numitor (Roman version), the Vestal who 41 Ind| Book EII.II:75-126 The Roman Illyricum roughly the Eastern 42 Ind| concern to revive traditional Roman values). ~Book TII:253-312 43 Ind| Janus~Book EIV.IV:1-50 The Roman two-headed god of doorways 44 Ind| Capitoline (Cassius Dio The Roman History 54.4)~Book EII.VIII: 45 Ind| grandfather ~Juventa~An ancient Roman goddess later identified 46 Ind| the Alban Hills. With the Roman conquest it was extended 47 Ind| c95-c54BC) the greatest Roman didactic poet and author 48 Ind| god, son of Jupiter, the Roman name for the Greek god Ares. 49 Ind| wrote Trabeatae, comedies of Roman manners among the Equestrian 50 Ind| known in adaptations by the Roman dramatists Terence and Plautus. ~ 51 Ind| Range, on the frontier of Roman Moesia. Modern Nesebur.~ 52 Ind| of Miletus.~ ~Minerva~The Roman name for Athene the goddess 53 Ind| under Jason.~ ~Moesia~A Roman province covering roughly 54 Ind| temple there to Athens, or in Roman myth to Aricia. The rites 55 Ind| remembrance of his writing in his Roman garden, or on his familiar 56 Ind| covering six months of the Roman year, are mentioned here, 57 Ind| the offer of the return of Roman standards captured by the 58 Ind| Propertius (c.50-c.15BC) the Roman elegiac poet, from Asisium ( 59 Ind| Danube delta the furthest Roman region on the west coast 60 Ind| note.~Book EI.II:53-100 The Roman language, Latin, the tongue 61 Ind| then vanished, becoming the Roman god Quirinus.~ ~Rufinus~ 62 Ind| land on the border of the Roman area.~Book TIII. X:1-40 63 Ind| and remained important in Roman times, but declined after 64 Ind| in 78BC, and author of a Roman history praised by Varro 65 Ind| The border for Ovid of the Roman region round Tomis.~Book 66 Ind| ancient sources close to the Roman Forum, the Temple of Saturn, 67 Ind| and Apollodorus for the Roman stage, often blending material 68 Ind| Romans.~ ~Ticidas, Ticida~A Roman elegiac poet, contemporary 69 Ind| Augustus. (Cassius Dio, The Roman History 54.11)~Book TIII.