nomen in English

noun
1
the second personal name of a citizen of ancient Rome, indicating the gens to which he belonged, for example, Marcus Tullius Cicero.
Maecenas is his nomen or family name.

Use "nomen" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "nomen" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "nomen", or refer to the context using the word "nomen" in the English Dictionary.

1. The Turin canon provides the prenomen Sewadjkare and nomen Hori for this king.

2. Analoga autem secundum Attributionem sunt, quorum nomen commune est, ratio autem secundum illud nomen est eadem secundum terminum, et diuersa secundum habitudines ad illum: ut sanum commune nomen est medicinae, urinae et animali; et ratio omnium in quantum sana sunt, ad unum terminum (sanitatem scilicet), diuersas dicit habitudines.

3. Caulem habet Cubitalem, erectum; floret versicolori specie, sicut arcus caelestis, unde et nomen

4. Thus, in the designation Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus, Publius is the proenomen, Cornelius is the nomen, Scipio the cognomen, and Africanus the Agnomen

5. Compare with nomen, praenomen, agnomen ‘A grateful Senate voted him the Cognomen Augustus, by which name he is generally known in the history books.’

6. [169] anchora morsu hoc nomen cum in Graeco, unde originem ducit, Aspirationem non habeat, in Latino aspiratur: quod est contrarium; nam magis Graecorum est aspiratio

7. 46 Adoptio nomen generale comprehendens duas species, adoptionem scilicet et Arrogationem : così si legge in un’ additio di Giovanni Francesco Deciani al Dictionarium iuris di Alberico da Rosate

8. Cum nomen favere, omnes Byssuses carpseris nobilis, dexter caculaes.--首页管理 Extending the Library Space for Our Readers and Visitors Historia de azureus index, perdere messor!

9. The Cognomen (plural cognomina) formed one of the three parts of the typical Roman name.It was placed after the praenomen and nomen.Originally cognomina were nicknames, but by the time of the Roman Empire they were inherited from father to son.Thus the Cognomen in combination with the nomen functioned as a surname, breaking families into smaller groups than just the nomen alone.

10. Domine audi, Domine propitius esto, Domine attende, vel, Animadverte, et fac, ne moreris propter te, Deus mi, quia nomen tuum invocatum est super urbem tuam, et super populum tuum

11. Adrenalone [usan] srs_locator 4 chemid srs nomen: 5 Adrenalone [inn] srs_locator 6 usp42-nf37 2s - 9155, epinephrine monograph uspnf public_domain_release: 7 Adrenalone [who-dd] srs_locator 8 usp dictionary 2008

12. The praenomen among the Romans distinguished the person, the nomen, the gens, or all the kindred descended from a remote common stock through males, while the Cognomen denoted the particular family.

13. His Egyptian nomen or birth name was actually Nesbanebdjed meaning "He of the Ram, Lord of Mendes" but it was translated into Greek as Smendes by later classical writers such as Josephus and Sextus Africanus.

14. Et unguenti, quo aegroti unguntur, ad Alleviationem, et thuris, thus est nomen arboris, et etiam gummi ab eo manantis; et hoc secundo modo accipitur, et habet vim medicinalem, et etiam venditur et emitur in usum divini cultus, et vini.

15. Amphibolia L.Bolus ex Herre 1971: 70; L.Bolus JSAB 1965: 169 nomen invalid.; Toelken & Jessop 1976: 64; Hartmann & Dehn 1989: 179–182; Hartmann Bradleya 1996: 29–56; Hartmann Bradleya 1998: 44–51; Hartmann 2001: 37–39 Lectotypus A

16. Verum cum nullus sit modus, qui non ad quemvis affectum exprimendum adduci possit, modò accedat peritus artifex, ita hic Modus hodie plerunque ita flecti solet, vt Commiserationem excitet, et religione quadam animum imbuat, vnde et apud Apuleium religiosi nomen accepit.

17. Cognomen (n.) 1754, "a distinguishing name;" 1809, "a surname;" from Latin, from assimilated form of com "with, together" (see com-) + (g)nomen "name" (from PIE root *no-men-"name")

18. Ceterum uti militare nomen, grave inter otiosos, aliis virtutibus temperaret, tranquillitatem atque otium penitus hausit, cultu modicus, sermone facilis, uno aut altero amicorum comitatus, adeo ut plerique, quibus magnos viros per Ambitionem aestimare mos est, viso aspectoque Agricola quaererent famam, pauci interpretarentur.

19. Binomial (n.) 1550s, "an algebraic expression consisting of two terms," from Late Latin binomius "having two personal names," a hybrid from bi-"two" (see bi-) + nomius, from nomen (from PIE root *no-men-"name")

20. The name R. crista-galli, however, has been declared a nomen dubium, and in Europe the corresponding plant is now known as R. minor L. We have compared North American and European material of Rhinanthus on the basis of general morphology, soluble seed proteins, and seed morphology.

21. Used Attributively, adjectives precede the nouns they modify.: Es gibt nur Postpositionen und Adjektive folgen dem Nomen, das sie modifizieren.: To learn more about attributive network topologies, see Creating Topologies.: Weitere Informationen zu attributiven Netztopologien finden Sie unter Erstellen von Topologien.: Logical topologies in an industry model support both spatial and attributive

22. Though Huni, the last king of the 3rd Dynasty, was the first to enclose his throne name in a true cartouche, by the 5th Dynasty, both the king's prenomen, or throne name (Egyptian nesu-bit), and his nomen, or birth name (Egyptian sa-re), were written within Cartouches

23. Apologia pro casuistis liber francogallicè conscriptus sub titulo Apologie pour les Casuistes contre les calomnies des jansénistes (Apologia pro casuistis adversus calumnias Iansenistarum), opus est theologiae moralis quod a "theologo professoreque quodam iuris canonici" cuius nomen non liquet in lucem prodiit mense decembri anno 1657 Lutetiae Parisiorum e praelis Caspari Meturas.

24. An author in the Roman Empire, Lucius Apuleius Madaurensis.··A masculine nomen — famously held by: Lucius Apuleius Saturninus (138–100 BC), tribunus plebis in 103 and 100 BC Apuleius Madaurensis (circa AD 124–170), a spirited and flowery – but sometimes bombastic – writer, whose principal work yet extant is called Metamorphoseon sive de

25. Et ecce homo erat in Hierusalem cui nomen Symeon et homo iste iustus et timoratus expectans Consolationem Israhel et Spiritus Sanctus erat in e English And, behold, there was a man in Jerusalem, whose name was Simeon; and the same man was just and devout, waiting for the consolation of Israel: and the Holy Ghost was upon him.