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Greco-Roman

[ US /ˌɡɹɛkoʊˈɹoʊmən/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. of or pertaining to or characteristic of the ancient Greeks and Romans, especially their art, literature, or culture
    the classical world
    classical mythology

How To Use Greco-Roman In A Sentence

  • In greco-roman architecture it is a horizontal Band, often decorated with relief sculpture , Between the architrave and cornice of a Building.
  • Does it matter if they are "real" (e.g. members of the Greco-Roman pantheon) or products of the author's imagination? Signing Thursday & Convention in Minneapolis
  • Classical archaeologists specialize in the cultures of the ancient Greco-Roman world, while palaeoethnobotanists explore ways that botanical residues of ancient and prehistoric cultures can tell us about their economies and social systems.
  • I mentioned on this thread the relationship of the Goetia to both the Greco-Roman & Arabic magical traditions and it might be useful to investigate the manner in which conjurations were structured in say, the theurgic tradition.
  • Nobody even gave him much chance of surviving the match for the gold in Greco-Roman wrestling's super heavyweight division.
  • When in AD 229 the historian Dio Cassius died, the Greco-Roman world was still materially and spiritually secure. Success Story
  • But the Egyptian sculptures at Wilton were unusual, and most contemporary collectors of Greco-Roman marbles would have considered such works barbarous and unpleasing.
  • The artist has no doubt found inspiration in Greco-Roman statuary and reliefs, because figures and forms are as flat as a classical frieze.
  • Many religions of the day, including some of the Greco-Roman “mystery religions,” were open to people of varied ethnicities. One World, Under God
  • Neither Greco-Roman, nor WWF, alligator wrestlers are actually trying to do something more akin to calf-roping: Catch an alligator from a pool or pit and bind its jaws shut with rope. Boing Boing
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