Get Free Checker

How To Use Antiquity In A Sentence

  • The affinities between music and poetry have been familiar since antiquity, though they are largely ignored in the current intellectual climate.
  • The chapel or church claims greater antiquity than any other in that part of the kingdom; but there is no appearance of this in the external aspect of the present edifice, unless it be in the two eastern windows, which remain unmodernized, and in the lower part of the steeple. The Life of Charlotte Bronte
  • Robert Dossie described three categories of watercolor painting — miniature, the most delicate; distemper, which is coarser, uses less expensive colors in a glue or casein binder, and is appropriate for canvas hangings, ceilings, and other interior decorative painting purposes; and fresco. reference As a technique practiced by the Romans, fresco painting was a subject of particularly interest in the antiquity-obsessed eighteenth-century. The Creation of Color in Eighteenth-Century Europe
  • Beyond its antiquity, it is hard to say precisely what makes the Old Course such a pleasure.
  • The interior teems with antiquity: ornate plasterwork, a huge inglenook, stained glass, elaborate panelling and a plank and muntin screen. Personal finance and money news, analysis and comment | guardian.co.uk
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
Fix common errors and boost your confidence in every sentence.
Get started
for free
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
  • Like most of the terms that refer to major conceptual anchors of the western intellectual tradition, its origins may be traced to classical antiquity.
  • One might conclude, as some did in antiquity, that Arcesilaus therefore had a hidden objective of undermining Stoic or Epicurean empiricism in favor of Platonic doctrine.
  • On these relics of antiquity and of ancestorial memorials devolving on Dr. Jefferson, he sought for a place of deposit for them, suitable to their dignity, their character, and their times. The Scottish Chiefs
  • And if it be true of the medicinal eyesalves of antiquity that they commonly caused the eye to smart on their first application (Tob.xi. 8, 12), "mordacia collyria, Epistles to the Seven Churches in Asia.
  • Davies, wishing to give dignity to his Celtic mythology, determines to find the arkite idolatry there too, and the style in which he proceeds to do this affords a good specimen of the extravagance which has caused Celtic antiquity to be looked upon with so much suspicion. Celtic Literature
  • It is true that the dic - tionary meaning of the term symmetry has shifted since antiquity, but none of the original connotations has become obsolete, certainly not entirely so. SYMMETRY AND ASYMMETRY
  • Similarly, no scribe in antiquity could have worked with such a typology, for every variation in the objects could never be registered in bureaucratic discourse.
  • Egypt, because of its antiquity and the affinities of the hiero - glyphs to Chinese characters, was identified by some as the center from which the great postdiluvian migra - tion to the East began. Dictionary of the History of Ideas
  • He considers attitudes to antiquity and to change in general terms, and looks at perceptions of old traditions and proverbial lore.
  • Used for storage and for seating, cassoni were patterned after ancient Roman sarcophagi, which were much appreciated in the Renaissance when there was a renewed interest in classical antiquity.
  • For a reader who knows the primary sources, it is a rich pleasure to see Roman antiquity so thoroughly and feelingly brought back to life. Harris is very modern, very pagan, even raunchy at times, just as the Romans must have been.
  • England -- are mostly extremely handsome, and generally contrive, however big, to retain, at any rate in their heart, as at Antwerp, or in the Grande Place at Brussels, a striking air of antiquity; whilst some fairly big towns, such as Malines and Bruges, are mediaeval from end to end. Beautiful Europe: Belgium
  • (Interestingly, fava beans are widely known as a major trigger substance, leading to the oft-used colloquial name of favism for the disorder and the intriguing historical speculation that "favism has been known to exist since antiquity; the Greek philosopher and mathematician Pythagoras was said to have warned his disciples against the dangers of eating fava beans.") Randall Amster: The Most Common Disease You've Never Heard Of
  • The Oracle Bone Inscriptions is a kind of antiquity and beautiful character, an integrated symbol, and an unique graphic symbol.
  • These pieces of pop antiquity might sound like cartoon music to contemporary ears.
  • He has noted that population size is an important element in determining population diversity which is usually assumed to derive from the antiquity of a population.
  • Miss Vernon, as she gave a glance after him; it is hard that persons of birth and rank and estate should be subjected to the official impertinence of such a paltry pickthank as that, merely for believing as the whole world believed not much above a hundred years ago --- for certainly our Catholic Faith has the advantage of antiquity at least. '' Rob Roy
  • But the secret and symbolical hint was the harmonical nature of the soul; which, delivered from the body, went again to enjoy the primitive harmony of heaven, from whence it first descended; which, according to its progress traced by antiquity, came down by Cancer, and ascended by Hydriotaphia, or Urn-burial
  • The cerrado is a vegetation formation of great antiquity, that may have existed in "prototypic form in the Cretaceous, before the final separation of the South American and African continents. Chris McGowan: Biofuel Could Eat Brazil's Savannas & Deforest the Amazon
  • The rock's great antiquity means fanciful myths have grown around it. Times, Sunday Times
  • The small apparent quantity of matter that exists in the universe compared to that of spirit, and the short time in which the recrements of animal or vegetable bodies become again vivified in the forms of vegetable mucor or microscopic insects, seems to have given rise to another curious fable of antiquity. The Botanic Garden A Poem in Two Parts. Part 1: the Economy of Vegetation
  • Its left panel frames a standing portrait of Serena, her hair arranged in a thick roll around her head, her person adorned in the high-necked voluminous tunic layered over a tighter-fitting underdress that had become the prevailing fashion for women of late antiquity. Caesars’ Wives
  • I wished there had been more detail on the frames but we realised that the makers were probably lost in antiquity as just nameless craftsmen. Vermeer and Rembrandt at the Vancouver Art Gallery « Colleen Anderson
  • At the risk of seeming to fantasticate I confess that the Pope's having built the viaduct -- in this very recent antiquity -- made me linger there in a pensive posture and marvel at the march of history and at Pius the Italian Hours
  • In the face of all this antiquity, the couple left the rough stone farmhouse pretty spare and plain. Times, Sunday Times
  • Only the west provided a relatively easy route through which populations might have entered this region in deep antiquity.
  • For, besides these lacrymatories, notable lamps, with vessels of oils, and aromatical liquors, attended noble ossuaries; and some yet retaining a vinosity and spirit in them, which, if any have tasted, they have far exceeded the palates of antiquity. Hydriotaphia, or Urn-burial
  • Only the west provided a relatively easy route through which populations might have entered this region in deep antiquity.
  • Although it is known that the other island, known in antiquity as Lerina, was inhabited from an early period, there is nothing to see there relating to Honoratus, the 4th century saint from whom it derives its modern name.
  • He had attended Eton and Oxford, two schools still acquainted with the study of classical antiquity, and it’s conceivable that in the media’s terms of endearment he recognized the debt owed to the very ancient Greeks, who allowed their sacred kings to rule in Thebes for a single triumphant year before putting them to death in order that their blood might fructify the crops and fields. Lewis Lapham: Domesticated Deities: About Messiahs Come to Redeem Our Country, Not Govern It
  • M'Queen had laid stress on the name given to the place by the country people, Ainnit; and added, 'I knew not what to make of this piece of antiquity, till I met with the Anaitidis delubrum in Lydia, mentioned by Pausanias and the elder Pliny.' The Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides with Samuel Johnson, LL.D.
  • His insistence on using the techniques of antiquity—he still scales up from small clay models and, when his work is cast, the foundry uses the cire perdue method—result in work that is completely contemporary, yet also somehow fragments that could have come from any point in the history of Western art. A Magnificent Obsession
  • This fortress is as ancient as the town, said to have been built about the middle of the twelfth century, and is situated on an elevation at the foot of which flows the Moskva, but there is nothing remarkable in the style excepting its antiquity. Memoirs of Madame Vigée Lebrun
  • With its elegant coiffure and elaborate rings of jewelry covering the shoulders and upper chest, this sculpture speaks of the antiquity of the arts of adornment in sub-Saharan Africa.
  • Antiquity to angling is like social position to the gentleman:I would rather prove myself a gentleman, by being learned and humble, valiant and inoffensive, virtuous and communicable, than by any fond ostentation of riches, or, wanting those virtues myself, boast that these were in my ancestors; and yet I grant, that where a noble and ancient descent and such merit meet in any man, it is a double dignification of that person. . . The ideal of the gentleman
  • Greek fondness for resinated wine originated in antiquity when goatskin wine bags and later wooden barrels were sealed with resin to prevent leakage.
  • An array of sculpture is also on view, revealing the influence of mythology and foreign culture in classical antiquity.
  • The tomb of Djehutynakht (je-hooty-knocked) and his wife, also named Djehutynakht, was thoroughly looted in antiquity, but artifacts the thieves left behind provide an extraordinary window on life in ancient Egypt. Exhibitions: Egypt's Model Afterlife
  • The common household fork was nearly unknown in antiquity.
  • Relatively few have survived from antiquity, since silver became scarce and a much sought after commodity in the late Empire.
  • He studied antiquity in immense detail, in search of a basis for reforming modern architecture, which he thought had become lumpish and boring.
  • I am lucky to have been able to savour the antiquity of the town in its relatively pristine state.
  • The argument did not gain stature from its antiquity; that only made it musty and tired.
  • A similarly close relation ship may be seen between ivory and some of the most important precious stones used in antiquity.
  • First, plenty of Europeans are pig-ignorant of the recent past, let alone antiquity. America's incomplete vision of the past
  • I believe the practice is a Christianization of the elaborate contractual rites of the various Nordic peoples who received the Faith in the period after Rome's fall and is thus a somewhat alien addition to our predominantly Mediterranean liturgical roots, though its antiquity does also give it a certain merit as well. Liturgical Wedding Crashers
  • The common household fork was nearly unknown in antiquity.
  • A curious amalgam of straight history and political pamphlet, it was relatively little read in antiquity, and its modern status has declined in recent years.
  • Ivy is the obvious choice, its triffid-like tendrils quickly blanketing surfaces with dense foliage and bringing an instant gothic antiquity. Times, Sunday Times
  • The question arises: what have American cantors done with this information concerning the antiquity - and ubiquity - of Jewish liturgy?
  • donjon" of great antiquity, crenelated, with towers at each corner and the whole construction forming an admirable specimen of Hispano-Flemish architecture. Vanished towers and chimes of Flanders
  • Whatever the cause, his brain had a rift of ruin in it, from the start, and though his delicate touch often stole a new grace from classic antiquity, it was the frangibility, the quick decay, the fall of all lovely and noble things, that excited and engaged him. A Study Of Hawthorne
  • The spread of this belief marks the divide between the mental outlook of Classical antiquity and that of the Middle Ages.
  • The Englishman's Castle is situated on a midden of great antiquity.
  • Man_, could not better employ their speculative minds than in determining the origin and antiquity of the venerable "joes" which have been in circulation beyond the remembrance of that mythical personage, The Jest Book The Choicest Anecdotes and Sayings
  • One of his criticisms of Michelangelo was that broken pediments should not be used simply for their architectonic effect but only on buildings associated with death, as in antiquity.
  • The wearing of penile sheaths made from a diversity of substances - linen, gourds, tortoiseshell, leather, silk, oiled paper - has been known in numerous societies from distant antiquity.
  • When we first met Govindan - at a recent photo expo in the city - he was cloaked in antiquity.
  • The bust was mutilated in late antiquity, probably by Christians who carved a cross in the forehead.
  • Thus Redclyffe really found less antiquity here, than in the graveyard which might almost be called his natal spot. Doctor Grimshawe's Secret — a Romance
  • The present author reserves the term folklore for application to those unappropriated scraps of popular song, story, myth, and superstition that have drifted down the stream of antiquity and that reach us in the scrap-bag of popular memory, often bearing in their battered forms the evidence of long use. Unwritten Literature of Hawaii The Sacred Songs of the Hula
  • This description owes its quaint sound partly to its antiquity, and partly to ambiguity.
  • A similarly close relation ship may be seen between ivory and some of the most important precious stones used in antiquity.
  • The Atlantis story also comes to us from antiquity, through the Greek philosopher and mythopoet Plato, who grew up under the spell of Homer's epics as well. Archive 2009-07-01
  • Simplicity and antiquity of green algae have long been accepted as evidence of their apparent ancestry to land plants.
  • The issue for me is closely associated with the antiquity of the earth.
  • It stood at the summit of the great platform, a quadrilateral mass of unburnt brick, which from a remote antiquity had supported the residence of the old Susian kings. The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient Eastern World, Vol 5. (of 7): Persia The History, Geography, And Antiquities Of Chaldaea, Assyria, Babylon, Media, Persia, Parthia, And Sassanian or New Persian Empire; With Maps and Illustrations.
  • Closely related to the confusion of tongues was the problem of China's antiquity and history, and its rela - tionship to orthodox Christian and Western beliefs in monogenesis. Dictionary of the History of Ideas
  • In antiquity, sceptics attacked the possibility of knowledge, but still needed to give some account of how they regulated their lives and opinions.
  • A look at the old ledgers is enough to convince one of the antiquity of the bank.
  • No author, excepting Pope, has done so much to endenizen the eminent poets of antiquity.
  • Discovered in August 1989, this tomb's main chamber had been robbed in antiquity, and yet its antechamber yielded the richest finds in terms of gold.
  • People are bowing in the presence of what they suppose to be the antiquity, that is, the hoary-headed wisdom, of the world. Our Unitarian Gospel
  • Judged solely in terms of his philosophical influence, only Plato is his peer: Aristotle's works shaped centuries of philosophy from Late Antiquity through the Renaissance, and even today continue to be studied with keen, non-antiquarian interest. Wayne Hale: NASA Can Provide the Inspiration - NASA Watch
  • The graveyard dates back nearly 200 years and due to the antiquity of the graves, many of them were not marked.
  • Only one desert civilization, out of dozens that grew up in antiquity, has survived uninterrupted into modern times.
  • But the word _‘ash_, or _‘ayish_ does not differ importantly from the word _na‘sh_, in Hebrew "assembly," in Arabic "bier," which has been the word used by the Arabs from remote antiquity to denote the four bright stars in the hind-quarters of the Great Bear; those which form the body of the Plough. The Astronomy of the Bible An Elementary Commentary on the Astronomical References of Holy Scripture
  • The conditions upon which was engrafted this compact were of great antiquity, had indeed been brought across the Rhine by the German conquerors; but the Northmen were the impelling cause of the swift development of feudalism in France. A Short History of France
  • Archaeology can show that Britain since antiquity has been a diverse, multi-ethnic and multicultural nation, something that needs remembering more than ever today.
  • Christian and Latin Christian theological paradigms in Late Antiquity are related closely with Plotinus' Neo- Platonism, their theologies are based on Plotinus' philosophy.
  • On these relics of antiquity, and of ancestorial memorials devolving on The Scottish Chiefs
  • This is not a structural defect - only a sign of antiquity.
  • This type of marginality can be illustrated easily in antiquity in relation to hierarchy, or vertical social ranking.
  • Indeed, the possibility that it was originally a Luwian loanword hints at its much greater antiquity.
  • There it stands, high above them all, and remote from them all, in its air of great antiquity, in its unaccountableness, in its serene truthfulness, in its unapproachable sublimity, in that impress of divine majesty and ineffable holiness which even the unbelieving neologist has been compelled to acknowledge, and by which every devout reader feels that the first page in Genesis is forever distinguished from any mere human production. Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader Being Selections from the Chief American Writers
  • Transition to Christianity: Art of Late Antiquity, 3rd - 7th Century A.D." offers a corrective to the rampant consumerism of our day with a condign lesson in Christianity's classical roots and intense devotions while also reminding us that a trade in objects flourished from its earliest times. Transformational Objects
  • Historians continue to debate the antiquity and plausibility of his discovery.
  • It may now be expected that I should offer some opinion as to the antiquity and race of this singular exsiccation. A Further Contribution to the Study of the Mortuary Customs of the North American Indians
  • The superior man acquaints himself with many sayings of antiquity and many deeds of the past, in order to strengthen his character thereby. John Milton 
  • The constant practice of the churches in former ages, in all their meetings for advice and counsel, to consent unto some form of wholesome words, that might be a discriminating "tessera" [symbol] of their communion in doctrine, being used in prime antiquity, -- as is manifest in that ancient symbol commonly esteemed apostolical (of the chief heads whereof mention in the like summary is made in the very first writers among them), -- having also warrant from the word of God, and being of singular use to hold out unto all other churches of the world our apprehensions of the mind of God in the chief heads of religion, may be considered. The Sermons of John Owen
  • The affinities between music and poetry have been familiar since antiquity, though they are largely ignored in the current intellectual climate.
  • The former is seen in the rectilinear and symmetrical designs, including some carvings and moldings that are formed with characteristic regence strapwork, grotesques, and classical motifs from antiquity.
  • That the first Gospel was written by this apostle is the testimony of all antiquity. Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • The rock's great antiquity means fanciful myths have grown around it. Times, Sunday Times
  • The members of the Committee for International Relations of the Japanese Archaeological Association (JAA), who translate these and other materials on the JAA website, have carefully chosen at least one site from each major period in Japanese archaeological studies: paleolithic, Jomon, Yayoi, Kofun, antiquity, medieval, and “modern” (which seems to begin in the 16th century). 井の中の蛙 » Noteworthy Archaeological Sites, Issue 2008 » Print
  • The medieval history of these islands is very old (we share that antiquity with the rest of Europe) and very well-documented in terms of texts.
  • Figurative scenes taken directly from, or inspired by, Roman wall paintings and marble friezes are framed with elaborate borders of motifs and symbols derived from antiquity.
  • The trussing, for which the demipique saddle of the day afforded particular facility, is alluded to in the text; and the author, among other nickcnacks of antiquity, possesses a leathern flask, like those carried by sportsmen, which is labelled, "King James's Hunting The Fortunes of Nigel
  • Andrew Testa/Panos for The Wall Street Journal He still insists on using the techniques of antiquity—scaling up from small clay models and, when his work is cast, the foundry uses the cire perdue method. Wild Horses
  • You have to soak up the air of antiquity and fill in the blanks yourself. Times, Sunday Times
  • In antiquity commentators traditionally referred to this intellect as the active intellect, nous poiêtikos.
  • The fusion of the two ends of the production spectrum - formal and informal - gave rise to one of the most popular book scripts of late Antiquity, half-uncial.
  • The word cathedra, so expressive in the language of antiquity, has gradually been replaced in liturgical usage, by throne (thronus) or seat (sedes). The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 3: Brownson-Clairvaux
  • Laced outer garments to shape the body existed from antiquity, but laced undergarments date from the end of the sixteenth century.
  • At best, modern atheism can be misread back into classical antiquity. The Times Literary Supplement
  • It follows the restrained style associated with classical antiquity.
  • Regardless of their antiquity or state of dilapidation, there was a constant demand for such books.
  • The affinities between music and poetry have been familiar since antiquity, though they are largely ignored in the current intellectual climate.
  • The effigies of antiquity were created to perpetuate the memory of the deceased as he or she looked while alive.
  • The wisdom of great sages of antiquity comes to us mainly through the aural tradition, and so has almost certainly suffered distortion through intermediaries.
  • The sceptics of antiquity lived under the rule of absolute emperors; those of the Renaissance under absolutist monarchs.
  • But this synonymy between the female lips was used to woman's disadvantage in antiquity.
  • The nose is mutilated; the bust was apparently deliberately buried in late antiquity with a companion piece of slightly later date.
  • Since it was the Stoics who, in antiquity, developed a sentence logic, by contrast with Aristotle's term logic, it would appear that Boethius's treatise on hypothetical syllogisms is the tributary of Stoic logic.
  • The origins of this ancient structure are lost in antiquity.
  • With its mixture of antiquity, regality and aloofness, it is both royal and ancient in ways no other Scottish burgh will ever be.
  • Germans are not the rod predestined for the chastening of these degeneracies, who knows whether we may not again, like our fathers in dim antiquity, have to gird on our swords and go forth to seek dwelling-places for our increase? Gems (?) of German Thought
  • The diachronistic but yet synchronistic observation of different political structures (from states and empires of the antiquity via India to the United States of America) makes it clear that constitution is much more than a body of laws and that a national community is never a mere community of law but always a community of values too.
  • To many readers, however, the finest discoveries of the book would be priceless nuggets of information about the marvels of nature and antiquity.
  • Modern Antiquity: Picasso, de Chirico, Léger, and Picabia in the Presence of the Antique Edward Goldman: In These Gods We Trust
  • And by that I mean anti-homosexuality have their roots in antiquity, and are linked to religious proscriptions against certain sex acts and are thus unconstitutional because it violates the whole no establishment of religion in government thing. Think Progress » Portugal’s parliament approves same-sex marriage.
  • Ad placitum, are the characters real before mentioned, and words: although some have been willing by curious inquiry, or rather by apt feigning, to have derived imposition of names from reason and intendment; a speculation elegant, and, by reason it searcheth into antiquity, reverent, but sparingly mixed with truth, and of small fruit. The Advancement of Learning
  • The most important subjects are pastoral scenes of shepherdesses, landscapes, and animals; historical, literary and romantic themes; and themes inspired by antiquity.
  • The nose is mutilated; the bust was apparently deliberately buried in late antiquity with a companion piece of slightly later date.
  • Antiquitas seculi iuventus mundi; what we call antiquity and are accustomed to revere as such was the youth of the world. The Idea of Progress An inguiry into its origin and growth
  • The spread of this belief marks the divide between the mental outlook of Classical antiquity and that of the Middle Ages.
  • Nor must there be omitted another strange attestation of the antiquity of the whale, in his own osseous postdiluvian reality, as set down by the venerable John Leo, the old Barbary traveller. Moby Dick; or the Whale
  • An array of sculpture is also on view, revealing the influence of mythology and foreign culture in classical antiquity.
  • Gradually, cereals became the basic food of most of the civilizations of antiquity.
  • The origins of this ancient structure are lost in antiquity.
  • Few Renaissance humanists intended to repristinate the thought forms of antiquity, and fewer still can be said seriously to have adhered in any religious sense to the pagan mythologies so ubiquitous in their works. Dictionary of the History of Ideas
  • So the masque was essentially contemporary: when the masquers were unmasked, they proved to be not legendary creatures from classical antiquity, but the King and the nobility, and by inference possibly ourselves.
  • The diffusion of rye and oats, mainly reserved for animal feedstuffs in antiquity, was slow at first, accelerated from the seventh century onwards, and expanded dramatically in the tenth century.
  • Cannabis has been used for medicinal purposes since antiquity.
  • The name "Fenian" is of very remote antiquity, and appears to be most comprehensive in its signification, and to be peculiarly adapted to the great confraternity of patriots which now engrosses so much of the history of passing events. Ridgeway An Historical Romance of the Fenian Invasion of Canada
  • The civilizations of classical antiquity used culture and language, but not race, as a basis for making distinctions of superiority and inferiority. Macrosociology: An Introduction to Human Societies
  • In early religion it was "a profound symbol of cosmic fertility," says "Sexual Personae" author Camille Paglia, humanities professor at Philadelphia's University of the Arts. "Delphi, where the most famous oracle of antiquity sat, was called the omphalos, or navel of the world. The Age Of Navel Gazing
  • In the majority of cases the pot will have been fired to about 800° C in antiquity when it was made, so that accumulation of stored energy begins anew from that time, and there is the possibility, first suggested by Daniels et al., that the thermoluminescent glow observed from ancient pottery could be used as a measure of its age.
  • Some of the classical cities of antiquity, notably Athens and Rome, became dependent on trade by sea to import the building materials and foodstuffs necessary to maintain both their populations and their navies.
  • A Mr. Rudhall [11] said that, when Chatterton wrote on a parchment, he held it over a candle to give it the appearance of antiquity; and a Mr. Gardener has recorded, that he once saw Chatterton rub a parchment over with ochre, and afterwards rub it on the ground, saying, "that was the way to antiquate it. The International Magazine, Volume 2, No. 3, February, 1851
  • The continuation stated that Elliot Smith — with whom Keith was to quarrel a year or so later — had made the most notable contribution to the meeting with his commentary on the "brain cast" that was given him by Smith Woodward, and that "the chief divergence of opinion" in the discussion related to the antiquity of the finds, with Sir Arthur Keith — mentioned by name — regarding them as earlier than Pleistocene and possibly Pliocene, that is to say, the age to which some of the planted fossil animal teeth may have belonged. The Piltdown Mystery: An Exchange
  • In any case, however, where it shall be found contumaciously slighting credibility, and refusing to be reduced to anything like probable fact, we shall beg that we may meet with candid readers, and such as will receive with indulgence the stories of antiquity. The Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans
  • The gigantic temples of antiquity could never have been constructed had the architects adhered to the notion that the distance of two diameters and a half, called the eustyle, for the intercolumniation was essential, for architraves could not have been procured.
  • For some years, moreover, the strange phenomenon has presented itself of the provincial towns being the prey of Parisian manufacturers, who reconstruct them and demolish their picturesque antiquity, in order to garnish their boulevards and fine mansions, while Paris, on the contrary, is directed and governed by provincials, who provincialize it just as the Parisian companies parisianize the provinces. His Excellency the Minister
  • In our view, the misdating of the Baptistery was not just a blind spot in an otherwise lucid vision of the past, a breakdown of rationality explained by local patriotism and rivalry with Rome's antiquity.
  • At first once performed to the heathenism temple or the spacious building to rebuild, simultaneously the mold in the style of antiquity Rome rectangle meeting hall form constructed the Christ church.
  • The regime didn't like the 12-base, or duodecimal, calendar (inherited from antiquity and early Christianity), so it tried to impose a decimal calendar.
  • No other land sale in Scotland has relied on a charter of such antiquity for its sale.
  • The Cavaliere, indeed, as became a poet, paragoned her in his song to all the pagan goddesses of antiquity; and doubtless these were finer to look at than mere women; but so, it seemed, was she; for, to believe my grandmother, she made other women look no more than the big French fashion-doll that used to be shown on Ascension days in the Piazza. The Duchess at Prayer
  • The Comparison: The Sea God Image Between Greek Myth and Chinese Antiquity Myth.
  • And even as the mahogany of our grandfathers is now brought forth from garrets and unused rooms, and antiquity shops and farm-houses are searched for the good old-time furniture, so we are learning to take the old gardens for our models, and the old-fashioned flowers to fill our borders. A Woman's Hardy Garden
  • Herma's mausoleum was one of the most remarkable discoveries of Roman antiquity.
  • Cappadocian Fathers review the theological debates between Nicene Fathers and Arianism since 325, and established Greek Christian theological paradigm in Late Antiquity.
  • On ancient altars perfumes were offered to the gods, while in the kitchens of antiquity the same scents - saffron, cinnamon, rose, myrrh - might be used to flavour food and wine.
  • exempla" designed for the use of preachers and the writings of the classical authors of antiquity. The Book of Noodles Stories of Simpletons; or, Fools and Their Follies
  • Though the site had been looted in antiquity, many artifacts survived, including those found within a single burial mound known as kurgan 1. At the Museums
  • You may have noticed the running header for these pages: Late Antiquity.
  • Ivory continued to serve many of the same purposes in Christendom as it did in Classical antiquity.
  • These hillocks of waste and effete mineral always disfigure the neighborhood of ironmongering towns, and, even after a considerable antiquity, are hardly made decent with a little grass. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 09, No. 51, January, 1862
  • Relatively few have survived from antiquity, since silver became scarce and a much sought after commodity in the late Empire.
  • To be fair, amid all the grumbling he finds plenty to admire, not least the lovely medieval jumble of Old Town in Estonia's capital, Tallinn; the music of Arvo Pärt; the Grimm flair of Estonian names Tarmo, Gerli, Epp; and, with characteristic contrariness, Vana Tallinn, a revolting liqueur of unidentifiable sickliness and bogus antiquity. Stranger In a Strange Land
  • No such figures of Silenus happen to have survived from antiquity, though the idea of ‘a god within’ another statue or image is known from medieval Christian Europe and from Hindu India.
  • The most moderate party, consisting of those who would sustain the throne, but limit its powers by a free constitution, retaining many of the institutions and customs which antiquity had rendered venerable, was called the _Girondist party_. Madame Roland, Makers of History
  • Acupuncture has been used as medical means since antiquity in China.
  • First of all the definitions of these terms are anachronistic; they entail the retrojecting of many post-Enlightenment concerns into antiquity.
  • Extensive quarrying in Byzantine times has removed all evidence of earlier levels here, but topographically a main entrance into the temenos on Temple Hill in antiquity on this side makes the most sense.
  • Racing lately has been surrounded by hysteria, which is one of the most pejorative words in the language, as it was foisted upon us in antiquity by men who had determined that only women became emotionally overwrought.
  • This was the first time in antiquity that a complete writing system had been invented, rather than gradually evolved. EMPIRES OF THE PLAIN: Henry Rawlinson and the Lost Languages of Babylon
  • The extant pottery undoubtedly provides a precious resource of iconographic material that can greatly enrich our understanding of ancient Greece; but its status in antiquity has been exaggerated.
  • He painstakingly gathered and published in The African Past a rich collection of little-used documents dating back to antiquity.
  • So let's review the bidding of what it takes to recreate the Cold War, the most productive partner-rival relationship of all time or at least since Roman-Sassanian cohabitation in Late Antiquity! Michael Vlahos: America and China: Partners or Rivals?
  • The poem was accepted as Hesiod's in antiquity, but various indications point to the period 580-520 BC.
  • This is good since there is such a deluge of false information in regards to the antiquity of Wicca, and hopefully the seeker who reads these books will come away with a true sense of the age of Wicca.
  • The weight, ductility and imperishability of gold, for example, have underpinned its status as a substance of beauty, value and permanence since antiquity. Periodic Table Talk
  • This description owes its quaint sound partly to its antiquity, and partly to ambiguity.
  • This monument, called domesday-book, the most valuable piece of antiquity possessed by any nation, is still preserved in the exchequer; and though only some extracts of it have hitherto been published, it serves to illustrate to us, in many particulars, the ancient state of The History of England in Three Volumes, Vol.I., Part A. From the Britons of Early Times to King John
  • You have to soak up the air of antiquity and fill in the blanks yourself. Times, Sunday Times
  • The motive was mainly ascetic, but was in part connected with the greater authority which, in antiquity, attached to such renunciation.
  • Greek fondness for resinated wine originated in antiquity when goatskin wine bags and later wooden barrels were sealed with resin to prevent leakage.
  • No homely Boston phrase defiled their anglicized lips, their great collars stood up under their chins in an ecstasy of stiffness, and their shirt - fronts bore two buttons, avoiding the antiquity of three and the vulgarity of one. An American Politician
  • ‘Blood’, by contrast, had been invested since antiquity with mythical meaning, transcending the common sphere of everyday life.
  • A third instance is that paleontological evidence seemed to push the antiquity of life back to the earliest Archaean times.
  • Yet after the war modernists and their allies seized on this symbol of the antiquity of Japanese culture as a touchstone for their own designs.
  • The house was of no marked antiquity, yet of well-advanced age; older than a stale novelty, but no canonized antique; faded, not hoary; looking at you from the still distinct middle-distance of the early Georgian time, and awakening on that account the instincts of reminiscence more decidedly than the remoter and far grander memorials which have to speak from the misty reaches of mediaevalism. The Woodlanders
  • Clay tablets were rarely baked in antiquity, so it was a simple matter to soak, refashion and reuse them. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Remote antiquity, hymned by the tribe's poet, is revered, and the future feared as it may bring catastrophe or even annihilation.
  • The main purpose which I have had in view in writing this book has been to present an account of Greek philosophy which, within strict limits of brevity, shall be at once authentic and interesting -- _authentic_, as being based on the original works themselves, and not on any secondary sources; _interesting_, as presenting to the ordinary English reader, in language freed as far as possible from technicality and abstruseness, the great thoughts of the greatest men of antiquity on questions of permanent significance and value. A Short History of Greek Philosophy
  • Humidity had destroyed the sarcophagus of the father, Shendwas, while the tomb of the son, Khonsu, was robbed in antiquity, he said. 4,300-Year-Old Tombs Unveiled In Egypt (PHOTOS)
  • You have to soak up the air of antiquity and fill in the blanks yourself. Times, Sunday Times
  • In Lent, there was in antiquity a particularly close connection between the celebration of the Divine Office and the Mass. Compendium of the 1955 Holy Week Revisions of Pius XII: Part 8 - The Hours of the Celebration of the Holy Week Liturgies
  • Some cinquecento writers reflected on the fictiveness, pernicious sensuality, and compulsive force of the simulacrum, as it was identified in a long tradition stretching from late antiquity to the Reformation.
  • At the base there is a locally derived ground moraine that may be a remnant glacial deposit of much greater antiquity.
  • The quiet square evokes the classical arcades and statuary of antiquity (the sculpture is a torso of Aphrodite).
  • Thus the monstrous seizer of antiquity was appropriated as a Christian image of seduction and then of penitence and remorse.
  • A mild example of this from antiquity was the Roman Saturnalia at the time of the winter solstice.

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):