˜yÐÄvlog

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cantharus

[ kan-ther-uhs ]

noun

plural canthari


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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of cantharus1

< Latin < Greek °ìá²Ô³Ù³ó²¹°ù´Ç²õ
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

In the courtyard of the convent, which belongs to Benedictine nuns, is a fine specimen of the Roman vase called Cantharus, perhaps coeval with St. Cecilia's own residence here.

From

Cantharus, kan′tha-rus, n. a large two-handled drinking-cup: a laver in the atrium before ancient churches;—pl.

From

And Cantharus says— A. Shall we, then, take our ἀκÏατισμὸς there?

From

And Cantharus does so likewise, in the Tereus; where he says— Likening her bosom to Cydonian apples.

From

Plato, or Cantharus, says, in the Alliance— A boil'd torpedo is delicious food.

From

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