How To Use Juvenal In A Sentence

  • In the public baths, where money was taken, each person paid a quadrans, about the value of our halfpenny, as Juvenal observes, Travels through France and Italy
  • Southern blot analysis showed that there was one copy of Pin agene in Ae . juvenalis.
  • And, after what feels like a somewhat dutiful slog through Juvenal, Swift, and Pope, you would expect Denby at least to be aware of the limitations imposed by the shriveled range of cultural reference within which the contemporary media "ironist" must operate. Undefined
  • “By Heaven, it cannot!” said the knight, “unless the juvenal hath slain himself and buried himself, in order to place me in the predicament of his murderer.” The Monastery
  • I spoke it, tender juvenal, as a congruent epitheton appertaining to thy young days, which we may nominate tender. Love’s Labour ’s Lost
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  • I was never manned with an agate till now: but I will inset you neither in gold nor silver, but in vile apparel, and send you back again to your master, for a jewel, — the juvenal, the prince your master, whose chin is not yet fledged. The second part of King Henry the Fourth
  • “It is even as the juvenal hath said,” added the masker who spoke first; “Our major devil — for this is but our minor one — is even now at Lucina, fer opem, within that very Tugurium.” Kenilworth
  • Few men have more exquisitely tasted of glory and disgrace; nor could Juvenal (Satir. x.) produce a more striking example of the vicissitudes of fortune, and the vanity of human wishes.] 3 This last epithet of Procopius is too nobly translated by pirates; naval thieves is the proper word; strippers of garments, either for injury or insult, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • The juvenal plumage is browner and much more uniform below, lacking the strong yellowish suffusion and streaked appearance below of juvenal-plumaged B. montis.
  • Flight-feather molt categories were symmetric, adventitious, and juvenal.
  • The principal charm, however, belongs to the grotto with the river which it discharges -- the site of which may be described as a semicircular termination of a valley on a natural platform half way up a cliff -- the water tumbles down in short cascades for some distance; the grotto inside is untouched by chisel squarings or embellishment, just as Juvenal wished the grot of AEgeria to be. Byeways in Palestine
  • Augustus are forgotten the terrible invective of Tacitus and the sarcasm of Juvenal recall the cruelties and the terrors of Tiberius. Stray Studies from England and Italy
  • Qui custodiet ipsa custodies," the Roman poet Juvenal asked 1900 years ago. Henry J. Stern: NJ Corruption Soup: 5 Rabbis, 3 Mayors, 36 Honorables
  • That suggests that our captive SY birds molted their juvenal flight feathers on a schedule similar to that of Tufted Puffins in the wild.
  • Hellespont as along a royal road; and how his army drank a whole river dry -- all of which is gravely related by Herodotus as fact, is discredited by the Latin poet JUVENAL, who attributes these stories to the imaginations of "browsy poets. Mosaics of Grecian History
  • Morphologically, babblers differ from thrushes and flycatchers by the lack of distinct juvenal plumage.
  • I looked again and, now, the two smaller birds were on the back of yet another, medium sized juvenal roadrunner (fifth bird not previously seen). Mjh's blog — 2009 — December
  • The well-known passage of Juvenal, vii. 86 ( 'cum fregit subsellia versu, esurit, intactam Paridi nisi vendit Agaven'), as has been pointed out, is only Juvenal's exaggerated way of saying that the _Thebais_ brought Statius no material gain. Post-Augustan Poetry From Seneca to Juvenal
  • Maybe we can all trade our juvenal and childishness for suffering in sconce. WIL WHEATON dot NET: 1.5: April 2005 Archives
  • JUVENALtS Sldera te excipiant modo prlmos incipientcm 19 f Edere vagitus; & adhuc a matre rubentem. A. Persii Flacci et Dec. Jun. Juvenalis satirae: Ad optimas editiones ...
  • “I am she, O most bucolical juvenal, under whose charge are placed the milky mothers of the herd.” The Monastery
  • I have been so haunted by diabolical deceptions in this matter, that what do I know but that the devil may assume the form of this rustical juvenal, in order to procure me farther vexation? — The Monastery
  • In answer to a question from Hegius, Agricola goes on to distinguish the words mimus, histrio, persona, scurra, nebulo; with quotations from Juvenal and Gellius. The Age of Erasmus Lectures Delivered in the Universities of Oxford and London
  • Juvenal wrote that an incurable itch for scribbling cacoethes scribendi takes possession of many, and grows inveterate in their insane breast. Tracking Route 128….D.C. Churbuck Reports
  • That suggests that our captive SY birds molted their juvenal flight feathers on a schedule similar to that of Tufted Puffins in the wild.
  • Ever yours E.F. G. 'Sed genus humanum damnat caligo F.turi' -- a Lucretian line from Juvenal. Letters of Edward FitzGerald in Two Volumes Vol. II
  • Let it suffice thee, kind juvenal, that thou hast the The Monastery
  • A short autobiography is prefixed to the 1827 edition of Juvenal.
  • Cleiveland and that of Pope, as between the diverse schools known as the "Horatian" and the "Juvenalian". English Satires
  • Viewed by the satirists Persius and Juvenal as the archetypal master of the genre, Lucilius had put a stamp on verse satire which it has retained until the 20th century.
  • Granted, that essay is in the Juvenalian mode; the Horatian mode which includes everything from The Rape of the Lock to The Simpsons is less harsh. Terence Kealey’s Sexist “Lust” « Gender Across Borders
  • How canst thou part sadness and melancholy, my tender juvenal? Love’s Labour ’s Lost
  • I have been so haunted by diabolical deceptions in this matter, that what do I know but that the devil may assume the form of this rustical juvenal, in order to procure me farther vexation? — The Monastery
  • Juvenal derided the idea of married eunuchs and yet almost all of these neutrals have wives with whom they practise the manifold plaisirs de la petite oie (masturbation, tribadism, irrumation, tete-beche, feuille-de-rose, etc.), till they induce the venereal orgasm. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • I had originally given permission to a Greek fanzine to use the story -- a bit of juvenalia about a battle between the seelie and unseelie faerie courts as seen as a basketball game that is unpublished (and likely to remain so) in English -- last year for a special theme issue on sports to coincide with the Olympics. Breakfast in Bed

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