How To Use aliquant In A Sentence
- The words were the singular but simple ones of the poet Ebn Zaiat, 'Dicebant mihi sodales si sepulchrum amicae visitarem, curas meas aliquantulum fore levatas.' Berenice
- * [529] Conspectus ab utrâque acie aliquanto augustior humano visu, sicut cœlo missus piaculum omnis deorum iræ, qui pestam ab suis aversam in hostes ferret; A Brief Declaration and Vindication of The Doctrine of the Trinity
- Imperatore superioris Indi�, de quibus in secunda et tertia huius tractatus partibus, aliquanto est diffusius narrandum. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
- Ibi aliquanto tempore moram traxit ac magister hospicium fuit. The Latin & Irish Lives of Ciaran Translations Of Christian Literature. Series V. Lives Of The Celtic Saints
- Postquam Cyrenenses aliquanto posteriores se vident et ob rem corruptam [413] domi poenas metuunt, criminari Carthaginienses ante tempus domo digresses, conturbare rem, [414] denique omnia malle quam victi abire. C. Sallusti Crispi De Bello Catilinario Et Jugurthino
- 5 is an aliquant part of 12
- Posteà ad aliquantam moram simili modo dicit alias philosophorum, minimus digitus in aure: et ecce hoc omnes faciunt, donec dicat, sufficit: sic in aliam horam, seu moram dicit, manus vestra super os, et posteà manus super caput. The Voyages and Travels of Sir John Mandeville
- Acci fuit, ut his consulibus xl. annos natus Ennius fuerit: cui si aequalis fuerit Livius, minor fuit aliquanto is, qui primus fabulam dedit, quam ei, qui multas docuerant ante hos consules, et Plautus et The Student's Companion to Latin Authors
- Prop� quam ad meridiem est quoddam desertum magnum, in quo syluestres homines pro certo habitare dicuntur, qui nulla modo loquuntur, nec in cruribus habent iuncturas: et si quando cadunt, per se surgere sine adiutorio aliorum minime possunt, aliquantam tamen habent discretionem. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
- “Conspectus ab utrâque acie aliquanto augustior humano visu, sicut cœlo missus piaculum omnis deorum iræ, qui pestam ab suis aversam in hostes ferret;” — “He was looked on by both armies as one more august than a man, as one sent from heaven, to be a piacular sacrifice, to appease the anger of the gods, and to transfer destruction from their own army to the enemies,” Liv., A Brief Declaration and Vindication of The Doctrine of the Trinity