[
UK
/sˈiːzɐ/
]
[ US /ˈsizɝ/ ]
[ US /ˈsizɝ/ ]
NOUN
- conqueror of Gaul and master of Italy (100-44 BC)
- United States comedian who pioneered comedy television shows (born 1922)
How To Use Caesar In A Sentence
- He is the leader of a hilarious village of "unsubdued and irksome" Gauls still holding out against Caesar's legions in 50 B.C.
- Recollecting the day he saw Napoleon on the street, the poet imagines what must be the tumult of thoughts behind Caesar's moveless mask-the cities, the factories, the armies rising in the conqueror's dream of power.
- Caesarian deliveries were occasionally performed in the Middle Ages, but carried with them connotations of the devil, as the child would be not of woman born.
- Anaesthetists routinely provide epidurals for both vaginal and caesarean deliveries.
- We had a fantastic lasagna (cooked by Ben), garlic bread with cheese or without, a Caesar salad, and some wine.
- The pycnostyle is a temple in an intercolumniation of which the thickness of a column and a half can be inserted: for example, the temple of the Divine Caesar, that of Venus in Caesar's forum, and others constructed like them. The Ten Books on Architecture
- After Julius Caesar's assassination, the triumvirs was formed, consisting of three determined men, Octavius Caesar, Mark Antony, and Lepidus, who shared the rule of the Roman Empire.
- If not for Sabine, Deborah would easily have had a caesarian birth as were 32 percent of births in this country in 2007 - up 53 percent from 1996. Dana H. Glazer: My Experience With a Doula During Childbirth
- He probably went first to Caesarea, the main seaport, and thence by sea to Tarsus of Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
- Hattie was born by caesarean section, because I wasn't strong enough to go into labour. I had cancer while I was pregnant