Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • The sexual organs.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

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Examples

  • On stylistic grounds the anonymously transmitted paraphrases of the Categories, the Prior Analytics, the Sophistici elenchi, and the Parva naturalia edited in CAG 23 and 5 may also be attributed to Sophonias.

    Byzantine Philosophy Ierodiakonou, Katerina 2008

  • It seems that Albert has abandoned the position that even naturalia require divine illumination.

    Albert the Great Führer, Markus 2006

  • On the senses and their objects (the last six being included in the so-called Parva naturalia).

    Aristotle's Biology Lennox, James 2006

  • Grote steen! said Mijnheer Ton Luyk, who noted how the diamond belonged with both the naturalia and the artificialia for it was both a work of nature and the work of man.

    THE DIAMOND JULIE BAUMGOLD 2005

  • Grote steen! said Mijnheer Ton Luyk, who noted how the diamond belonged with both the naturalia and the artificialia for it was both a work of nature and the work of man.

    THE DIAMOND JULIE BAUMGOLD 2005

  • Grote steen! said Mijnheer Ton Luyk, who noted how the diamond belonged with both the naturalia and the artificialia for it was both a work of nature and the work of man.

    THE DIAMOND JULIE BAUMGOLD 2005

  • Alia generat homines paruæ saturæ cum oris foramine sic paruo, vt per fistulas alimentum, et potum sumant, et quoniam carent lingua et dentibus, monstrant per naturalia signa conceptus.

    The Voyages and Travels of Sir John Mandeville 2004

  • Alia generat homines paru� satur� cum oris foramine sic paruo, vt per fistulas alimentum, et potum sumant, et quoniam carent lingua et dentibus, monstrant per naturalia signa conceptus.

    The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation 2003

  • Such naturalia not only verified myth but gave the local residents a claim on the miracle.

    Looking for the Lost Greeks Wills, Garry 2003

  • Whatever the strength or weakness of Boardman's particular hunches, he certainly makes one aware of two things: the need of the Greeks to seek every way of connecting with their heroic but largely vanished past, and the obvious recourse that would have been offered them by physical realia (objects from everyday life), naturalia (objects from the natural world), and artificia (art objects and technological artifacts) surviving from that past.

    Looking for the Lost Greeks Wills, Garry 2003

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