plutarch in English

noun
1
( circa 46– circa 120 ) , Greek biographer and philosopher; Latin name Lucius Mestrius Plutarchus . He is chiefly known for Parallel Lives , a collection of biographies of prominent Greeks and Romans.

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

1. Plutarch on Alexander and Bucephalus

2. Now, Plutarch wrote a speech...

3. Plutarch, Animine an corporis affectiones sint peiores Gregorius N

4. He and Ictinus were architects of the Parthenon (Plutarch, Pericles, 13).

5. Plutarch wrote that Pyrrhus lost his best troops and his most trusted generals and friends.

6. According to Plutarch, Antigonus's army before the battle numbered around 70,000 infantry, 10,000 cavalry and 75 war elephants.

7. That Pheidias died in prison under mysterious circumstances, as Plutarch says, is a later and unfounded tradition. Sentencedict.com

8. Is called in Greek * * * that which Benumbeth the hands of them that touch him * * * a Pliny and Plutarch affirm

9. Plutarch gives a total of 64,000 infantry for the allies, with 10,500 cavalry, 400 elephants and 120 scythed chariots.

10. If one were to believe the Greek historian Plutarch (in "The Obsolescence of Oracles" (Moralia, Book ), Pan is the only Greek god who is dead.

11. Plutarch writes that Spartacus wished to escape north into Cisalpine Gaul and disperse his men back to their homes.

12. According to Plutarch, this name was given him either for his savage and spiteful behaviour or for his disagreeable way of speaking.

13. Plutarch of ancient Greece was one of the earliest Biographers and his work ‘Parallel Lives’, one of the earliest known biographies.

14. God is not only the infinite geometer, according to Plutarch, but infinitely Arithmetizes; creation proceeds not from the word but from the number

15. Several fragments, chiefly anecdotes and strictures of various kinds upon the character of nations and individuals, are preserved by Athenaeus, Plutarch and others.

16. Literary Koine was the medium of much of post-classical Greek literary and scholarly writing, such as the works of Plutarch and Polybius.

17. Greek philosopher Plutarch (c.46-120 C.E.) wrote of those in the world below: “[They] raised a cry of wailing as they underwent fearful torments and ignominious and excruciating chastisements.”

18. Plutarch notes that Caesar wrote to Crassus from Gaul, endorsing the plan to invade Parthia — an indication that he regarded Crassus's military campaign as complementary and not merely rivalrous to his own.

19. Plutarch called the first word "a saving demon," explained it as "the shame from pleasures which are contrary to law and uncontrollable," and associated it with Barythymia, heaviness of heart

20. It is also mentioned by Plutarch that the Parthians found the Roman prisoner of war that resembled Crassus the most, dressed him as a woman and paraded him through Parthia for all to see.

21. 2nd century BC), also known as Aganice of Thessaly, is cited as the first female astronomer in ancient Greece? She is mentioned in the writings of Plutarch and Apollonius of Rhodes as the daughter of Hegetor of Thessaly

22. 12 Juvenal, Satires 6, 10, 14 Pliny the Elder, Natural History 10 Plutarch, Lives Seneca the Younger, Apocolocyntosis divi Claudii; Octavia, 257–261 Suetonius, Lives of the Twelve Caesars: Claudius 17, 26, 27, 29, 36, 37, 39; Nero 6; Vitellius 2 Tacitus, Annals, XI.

23. Bucephalus was the famous and well-loved horse of Alexander the Great. Plutarch tells the story of how a 12-year old Alexander won the horse: A horse dealer offered the horse to Alexander's father, Philip II of Macedonia, for the enormous sum of 13 talents.

24. He'd even made himself a hand-drawn T-shirt last year that had a quote from mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss: "God Arithmetizes," itself a variation of a quote Plutarch famously attributed to Plato: "God geometrizes continually." Prospero was very tall for his age, but thin as a stick.

25. Suidas distinguishes three Greek musicians of this names of whom the first is mythical, and the last historical: the second probably owes his existence only to some mistake of Suidas, or the writer whom he copied, since Plutarch who is a much better authority only recognizes two musicians of the name; both of whom are connected with the Auletic music which had its origin in Phrygia