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Examples
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(The reader should be familiar with one more reference that will occasionally appear in these pages, Glos. ord., that is, the Glossa ordinaria of Accursius, ca. 1230, a great compilation of the opinions of the early professors of the Roman law at Bologna.)
Dictionary of the History of Ideas GAINES POST 1968
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Formal verse is poetry that uses the effects of rhyme, meter or form, especially in fixedstyles like sonnets or Glossa.
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Note 16: Ethniki Glossa (National Tongue), founded in 1905, and the Educational Society and the Students 'Fraternity (Foititiki Sindrofia) founded in 1910 were three of many organisations inspired by the demotic movement.
Arms and the Woman: Just Warriors and Greek Feminist Identity 2008
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"A lot of our patients are transportation-challenged, so we don't want to send them all over town," Glossa said.
Reston health clinic focuses on prevention as part of Fairfax County pilot program 2010
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Inter Glossa wrote: "I was very interested in A.C. Douglas 'mention of Bruckner 9 because I have never noticed Ring/Parsifal there."
Salvati dunque e scolpati Matthew Guerrieri 2007
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In the same decade, the Glossa of the theologian Alexander of Hales links being said in a prior and a posterior sense with ambiguity and
Medieval Theories of Analogy Ashworth, E. Jennifer 2009
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The Glossa ordinaria did not elaborate on physical aspects of this uncleanness, but explicated menstruation as indicative of human sinfulness or as comparable to other types of physical illness Christ could cure; see the glosss on Lev. 15: 21; for theological dimensions of menstruation, see Wood, "Doctor's Dilemma." back
A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries 2005
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The Glossa ordinaria is perhaps the most influential source to connect this passage from Revelations with the Innocents. back
A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries 2005
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St. Thomas was probably misled by the Glossa Ordinaria, In Matth. ii.
The Political Ideas of St. Thomas Aquinas Dino Bigongiari 1997
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Glossa: the inner lobe of second maxilla, corresponding to the lacing of first maxilla: loosely used as a synonym for tongue: especially applied to the coiled structure of the Lepidoptera; see also ligula.
Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology John. B. Smith
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