ProphetesAI is thinking...
eulogium
Answers
MindMap
Loading...
Sources
eulogium
eulogium (juːˈləʊdʒɪəm) Pl. eulogiums; also 8 eulogia. [a. med.L. eulogium, app. formed by a confusion between ēlogium (see eulogium) and eulogia (see eulogy), being used in both senses.] A laudatory discourse; a formal expression of praise; = eulogy 1.1706 Phillips, Eulogium, an Elogy, a praising o...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Eulogy
The modern use of the word eulogy was first documented in the 16th century and came from the Medieval Latin term eulogium. Eulogium at that time has since turned into the shorter eulogy of today.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
eulogious
eulogious, a. rare. (juːˈləʊdʒɪəs) [f. eulogium + -ous.] Full of eulogy; eulogistic.1887 Sat. Rev. 3 Dec. 768 Méry wrote lengthy prefaces and eulogious introductions. 1890 Harper's Mag. Mar. 562/1 To detain the reader with eulogious phrases.
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
John of Cornwall (grammarian)
, author of the English grammar Speculum Grammaticale
He is not to be confused with the twelfth-century theologian John of Cornwall who authored the Eulogium
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
elogium
‖ eˈlogium Obs. [L. ēlogium a short saying, an inscription on a tombstone; this word and its mod. forms seem to have been confused with eulogium, eulogy.] 1. An explanatory inscription.a 1699 Stillingfl. Serm. I. viii. (R.) The elogium of his cross, Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews. 2. = elogy 2–...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Charles Caldwell (physician)
attempt to establish the original sameness of three phenomena of fever (1796)
A semi-annual oration, on the origin of pestilential diseases (1799)
An eulogium fever: as it prevailed in Philadelphia in the year eighteen hundred and five (1807)
An anniversary oration on the subject of quarantines (1807)
An eulogium
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
philanthropic
philanthropic, a. (n.) (fɪlænˈθrɒpɪk) [ad. F. philanthropique (Mirabeau, 18th c.), f. Gr. ϕιλάνθρωπ-ος (see philanthrope) + -ic (cf. Gr. ἀνθρωπικ-ός, f. ἄνθρωπος).] Characterized by philanthropy; actuated by love of one's fellow-men; benevolent; humane.1789 (title) First Report of the Philanthropic ...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
William Barford
First Pythian' is published in Henry Huntingford's edition of Pindar's works, to which is appended a short life of the author, a list of his works, and a eulogium
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
temulence
temulence rare. (ˈtɛmjʊləns) [f. as next: see -ence.] = next.1803 D. H. Urquhart Comm. Class. Learn. iv. Euripides 149 An eulogium on wine and temulence. 1860 Mayne Expos. Lex., Temulentia,..temulence.
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Edward Barnard (provost)
Upon Barnard's death Johnson, according to Mrs Piozzi, pronounced a long eulogium upon his wit, learning, and goodness, and added: "He was the only man
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
pointedness
pointedness (ˈpɔɪntɪdnɪs) [f. as prec. + -ness.] The quality of being pointed; chiefly in reference to the expression of thought.1636 B. Jonson Discov. Wks. (Rtldg.) 759/1 The vicious language is vast, and gaping, swelling and irregular: when it contends to be high, full of rock, mountain, and point...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Robert Drury (Jesuit)
Works
There is a eulogium of Drury in the preface to a book called F. Robert Drury's Reliquary (1624), containing his prayers and devotions.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Roberts Vaux
He published Eulogium on Benjamin Ridgway Smith (Philadelphia, 1809); Memoirs of the Lives of Benjamin Lay and Ralph Sandiford (1815); Memoirs of the Life Vaux, Roberts, A Eulogium, on the Character of Benjamin Ridgway Smith: Late a Member of the American Literary Association (Philadelphia, 1809)
Vaux, Roberts
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
crakow
† crakow Obs. exc. Hist. (ˈkrækaʊ) Forms: 4–5 crakowe, 5 crawcow, 7–9 crac(k)owe, 8 crakow, crakoe. [f. Crakow, Krakau, or Cracovie, in Poland, whence they were introduced to England: see Zébot, Dějiny Kroje v Zem{iacu}ch Českych (History of Costume in Bohemia), Prague (1892) 333.] A boot or shoe wi...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Maximianus of Constantinople
The letter of Maximian announcing to the pope his succession is lost, but that to Saint Cyril of Alexandria remains, with its high eulogium on Cyril's
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org