How To Use toga In A Sentence
- It was called the Conestoga wagon, that being the name of the place in Pennsylvania where they were first made. Last of the Pioneers, Or Old Times in East Tenn.; Being the Life and Reminiscences of Pharaoh Jackson Chesney (Aged 120 Years).
- Well, in view of the fact that there is a slave part in it, I shall do just as I said and make it tragi-comedy. nunc hoc me orare a vobis iussit Iuppiter, ut conquaestores singula in subsellia eant per totam caveam spectatoribus, si cui favitores delegates viderint, ut is in cavea pignus capiantur togae; Amphitryo, Asinaria, Aulularia, Bacchides, Captivi Amphitryon, The Comedy of Asses, The Pot of Gold, The Two Bacchises, The Captives
- In Roman times, men standing for public office would wear white togas to signify their purity.
- The importance of PIR for network oscillation was perhaps most firmly established in the lobster stomatogastric ganglion.
- The first shot from the "Conestoga" struck the water a few feet from the "Yankee," and, ricochetting, plunged into her hull. The Naval History of the United States Volume 2 (of 2)
- Mention Saratoga Springs and its infamous race track is sure to come up. Maria Russo: Saratoga Springs: Mineral Baths, Museums And Homemade Potato Chips
- Flowers are self-compatible, but spontaneous autogamy occurs very infrequently due to protandry and to the spatial separation of anthers and stigma.
- Togaviridae, and Bunyaviridae arboviral infections in rural Cameroonian adults. PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
- The terms xenogamy, geitonogamy, and autogamy were first suggested by Kerner in More Letters of Charles Darwin — Volume 2
- The pollen cells are formed from mother cells by a process of cell division and subsequent setting free of the daughter cells or pollen cells by rejuvenescence, which is distinctly comparable with that of the formation of the microspores of Lycopodiaceæ, etc. The subsequent behavior of the pollen cell, its division and its fertilization of the germinal vesicle or oosphere, leave no doubt as to its analogy with the microspore of vascular cryptogams. Scientific American Supplement, No. 531, March 6, 1886