NOUN
- a marginal note written by a scholiast (a commentator on ancient or classical literature)
How To Use scholia In A Sentence
- In Ta ellinika scholia sti Thessaloniki kata tin Tourkokratia, Actes du Colloque Salonika: Female Education at the end of the Nineteenth Century.
- You should see what they can do with mixed disciplines -- scholia like histochemistry, immunodynamics, biophysics, terataxonomy, osmotic genetics, electrolimnology, and half a hundred more. A Case Of Conscience
- They fall into two categories: the first, a group of ten plays which have been transmitted to us in our medieval manuscripts complete with the accumulation of ancient notes and comments that we call scholia.
- An example is Arethas™ scholia on the Isagoge, which draws on many earlier commentaries, some of which are now lost. Byzantine Philosophy
- It is Arethas™ commentary in the sense that he copied, and possibly collected and edited, the scholia in his Aristotle manuscript; in terms of authorship, however, it is a product of mass collaboration. Byzantine Philosophy
- The most basic type of commentary is (a) simply a collection of scholia or notes, usually transmitted in the margin of the Aristotelian text. Byzantine Philosophy
- The identification is doubtful, but the scholiast (ancient commentator) knew Varus' origin.
- Such works have always been explicated through commentary, and this one too is designed for commentary, like the German Baroque dramas to which the learned Silesians appended their scholia.
- Such works have always been explicated through commentary, and this one too is designed for commentary, like the German Baroque dramas to which the learned Silesians appended their scholia.
- Apart from these works, we possess scholia from Olympiodorus 'commentary on Aristotle's de Interpretatione in the Codex Vaticanus Urbinas Graecus 35. Olympiodorus