ovid in English

noun
1
( 43 bc – circa ad 17 ) , Roman poet; full name Publius Ovidius Naso . He is noted for his elegiac love poems (such as the Amores and the Ars Amatoria ) and for the Metamorphoses , a hexametric series of tales of mythological, legendary, and historical figures.

Use "ovid" in a sentence

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

1. Ovid makes Cupid the patron of love poets

2. Love is a kind of warfare. Ovid 

3. There is a certain pleasure in weeping. Ovid 

4. Love will enter cloaked in friendship's name. Ovid 

5. If you would be loved, be lovable. Ovid 

6. By yielding you may obtain victory. Ovid 

7. Love and dignity cannot share the same abode. Ovid 

8. Ovid was a witty writer who excelled in creating lively and passionate characters.

9. Love is the force that leaves you colorless. Ovid 

10. Augustus exiled plenty of people on vague charges, including Ovid, one of Rome’s greatest poets.

11. Latin moves with impressive dignity in the writings of Ovid, Cicero, or Virgil.

12. Happy are those who dare courageously to defend what they love. Ovid 

13. Fascinated, Ovid held his breath and leapt boldly out across the abyss,[Sentence dictionary] back into the classical sunset.

14. THE AMORES, OR AMOURS OVID Every fiacre driver who waits for you at a shop door, Beguiles the time with a newspaper

15. Bluestocking give head I love you, you've read: Ovid, Anaïs Nin The Song of Solomon The Perfumed Garden and Georges Bataille's The Story of …

16. The libretto, by Antoine Houdar de la Motte, is based on the Greek myth of Ceyx and Alcyone as recounted by Ovid in his Metamorphoses.

17. Next he discourses upon the brain, which he Allegorizes as the king of our microcosm, served by entertaining such nourishing courtiers as Ovid and Ben Jonson

18. Clangor (n.) "a sharp, metallic, ringing sound," 1590s, from Latin Clangor "sound of trumpets (Virgil), birds (Ovid), etc.," from clangere "to clang," echoic (compare clang).

19. 1 A later tradition, according to which Hera conceived Ares by touching a certain flower, appears to be an imitation of the legend about the birth of Hephaestus, and is related by Ovid

20. The Bucolics profoundly influenced a wide range of canonical literary figures, from the contemporaneous Horace, Propertius, and Ovid through such successors as Calpurnius, Sannazaro, Marot, Spenser, Milton, Wordsworth, Robert Frost, and W

21. Numerous written relicts, Belletristic works (poems of Martial, Juvenal, Ovid etc.) indicate that oral hygiene and its tools (toothbrush, toothpick, use of tooth pastes and tooth-powder) were used long before our times

22. 1612, Michael Drayton, Poly-Olbion: And better yet than this, a Bulchin two years old 1637, Tho[mas] Heywood, “Ivpiter and Io”, in Pleasant Dialogves and Dramma’s, Selected ovt of Lucian, Erasmus, Textor, Ovid, &c

23. Ovid wrote in elegiac couplets , with two exceptions: his lost Medea , whose two fragments are in iambic trimeter and anapest s, respectively, and his great Metamorphoses, which he wrote in dactylic hexameter , the meter of Virgil 's Aeneid and Homer 's epics.

24. Cum multis Aliis quæ nunc perscribere longum est: with many other matters that it would be tedious now to write in full (i.e., etc., etc., etc.) de multis grandis acervus erit: out of many things a great heap will be formed (Ovid) de omni re scibili et quibusdam Aliis

25. Androgene (pl.) izolirati left in pursuit of the criminal public taffeta lewdness zerg atypical employment windstorm those gifts are always the most acceptable that owe their value to the giver (Ovid) cjevovodni transport land se joindre osada formales Ordnungswort (n.) schillern mettre en application veterinaarne jednolity geografio splitter

26. The Roman poet Ovid wrote many great stories of metamorphoses in his time, and among them was "Philemon et Baucis," or "Philemon and Baucis." Philemon and Baucis, married at a young age, were very poor, and lived in a land of wicked neighbors.

27. Coauthoring vmennyi súlya van monolayer puff pastries genetic load groefprofiel அம்மி, ஆட்டுக்கல் osminka testicle now as a man, now as a woman (Ovid) caribou phagocyte quantity surveyor bar anode bemerkbar agnostitsism pit de pollastre a la planxa amandman insistence agrar his wife to be in a standing posture

28. To be a type of the 'Continual Aesture' of this world.5 Ovid, in what is possibly the greatest storm description in Latin, the account in Metamorphoses of the gale that wrecks Ceyx, makes the sea the instrument of fate to which even the gods themselves are subject

29. Bella, mulier qui hominum Allicit et accipit eos per fortis: war, a woman who lures men and takes them by force: Latin proverb [citation needed] bella gerant alii Protesilaus amet! let others wage war Protesilaus should love! Originally from Ovid, Heroides 13.84, where Laodamia is writing to her husband Protesilaus who is at the Trojan War.

30. ‘The Cultivated reader is shouted down by his big rude pictures.’ ‘Members of their Cultivated or political classes are specially averse to this treatment.’ ‘As you must be a rather Cultivated person to be reading this section of the paper, you probably have your own idea of Ovid and his Metamorphoses.’

31. ‘The first six odes of Book 3 are sometimes referred to as the Roman Odes, written in stately Alcaics in elevated style on patriotic themes.’ ‘Later, he was taught to turn English verse into Alcaics and sapphics in Horatian style, as well as imitating Virgil, Ovid and the Greek tragedians.’

32. Androgynes.The androgyne (from the Greek andros, "man," and gune, "woman") is a creature that is half male and half female.In mythology, such a creature is usually a god and is sometimes called a hermaphrodite, after Hermaphroditus, son of Hermes and Aphrodite, who is said to have grown together with the nymph Salmacis (Ovid, Metamorphoses 4.347 – 388).

33. AndrogyneS.The Androgyne (from the Greek andros, "man," and gune, "woman") is a creature that is half male and half female.In mythology, such a creature is usually a god and is sometimes called a hermaphrodite, after Hermaphroditus, son of Hermes and Aphrodite, who is said to have grown together with the nymph Salmacis (Ovid, Metamorphoses 4.347 – 388).

34. Only literature Anoints me March 18 at 7:31 AM · -Publius Ovidius Naso (20 March 43 BCE – CE 17/18), known as Ovid (/ˈɒvɪd/) in the English-speaking world, was a Roman poet best known for the Metamorphoses, a 15-book continuous mythological narrative written in the meter of epic, and for collections of love poetry in elegiac couplets