Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at gerbert.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Gerbert.
Examples
-
Born of simple parents near Aurillac about 940, baptized under the name of Gerbert and educated at Aurillac, he had been taken away in 967 by Borrel II of Barcelona to those learned Iberian Marches where Moslem and Christian met.
The Early Middle Ages 500-1000 Robert Brentano 1964
-
Sabin recalled Gerbert saying last time they had met that his wife had been with child.
The Falcons of Montabard Chadwick, Elizabeth 2004
-
'Gerbert's besotted … even more so since she has quickened with child.'
The Falcons of Montabard Chadwick, Elizabeth 2004
-
'Do not refuse me …' Gerbert's voice had sunk to a dry whisper.
The Falcons of Montabard Chadwick, Elizabeth 2004
-
"This debt makes the economy much more vulnerable to shocks in the housing market, interest rates and employment," says Gerbert Hebbink, senior economist at the Dutch National Bank.
Mortgage Burden Looms Over Dutch Matthew Dalton 2011
-
"That's really just not the best thing to be doing with our financial aid," said Shane Gerbert, who helped lead the campaign against Higher One at the University of North Dakota.
Debit cards replacing credit cards on college campuses Ylan Q. Mui 2010
-
"That's really just not the best thing to be doing with our financial aid," said Shane Gerbert, who helped lead the campaign against Higher One at the University of North Dakota.
The new couple on campus: Student loan and debit card Ylan Q. Mui 2010
-
Gerbert, he wrote, was a learned humanist and wise philosopher, a true promoter of culture ...
Nancy Marie Brown: The Abacus and The Cross: When the Pope Was A Scientist Nancy Marie Brown 2010
-
Gerbert of Aurillac left us over 200 letters and a handful of scientific treatises.
Nancy Marie Brown: The Abacus and The Cross: When the Pope Was A Scientist Nancy Marie Brown 2010
-
For the picture Gerbert paints of the Dark Ages -- the thousand years between the fall of Rome and the Renaissance -- is lovely and surprising.
Nancy Marie Brown: The Abacus and The Cross: When the Pope Was A Scientist Nancy Marie Brown 2010
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.