Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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Capoana, to-day called the Vicaria, wherein are all the tribunals of that kingdom, and likewise the Castel dell 'Uovo; and where he likewise founded the towers he also made the gates over the River Volturno for the city of Capua, and a park girt with walls, for fowling, near
Lives of the Most Eminent Painters Sculptors and Architects Vol. 01 (of 10), Cimabue to Agnolo Gaddi Giorgio Vasari 1542
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Yesterday, I wrote 1,357 words and finished "Vicaria Draconis."
"Some people say I've done alright for a girl, oh, oh." readingthedark 2009
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Okay, the day's slipping past, and I have to finish "Vicaria Draconis" today.
"I'd rather be a forest than a street..." niamh_sage 2009
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Right now, the piece is called "Vicaria Draconis" (thank you, sovay).
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It's pretty much ready to go to thingunderthest to be PDFed, as soon as I have Vince's final artwork for "Vicaria Draconis."
All different, in exactly the same way. thingunderthest 2009
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Late last night, Vince sent me a sketch, his plan for the illustration for "Vicaria Draconis," and it's looking great.
"...to give you all the answers to the never-ending why." grandmofhelsing 2009
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He asked also who was in the coach, whither they were bound and what money they had, and one of the men on horseback replied, "The persons in the coach are my lady Dona Guiomar de Quinones, wife of the regent of the Vicaria at Naples, her little daughter, a handmaid and a duenna; we six servants are in attendance upon her, and the money amounts to six hundred crowns."
Don Quixote 2002
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A certain colonel, whose name I forget, and who had heard this vow, pledged himself, if a battalion were put under his command, to bring in Vardarelli, his two brothers, and the sixty men composing his troop, bound hand and foot, and to place them in the dungeons of the Vicaria.
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 55, No. 341, March, 1844 Various
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In a short time they were taken on shore again and lodged in the Vicaria prison, whence, each day, one or other of them was conveyed to the scaffold.
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Volume 61, No. 376, February, 1847 Various
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_Castello Capuano_, usually called la Vicaria, had been for several centuries the palace of the Kings and Viceroys, until Pedro de Toledo abandoned for a more splendid palace, that of the existing Kings, and devoted la Vicaria or _Castello Capuano_ to the civil and criminal courts of the realm.
The International Magazine, Volume 2, No. 2, January, 1851 Various
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