Name in ancient Rome which identified people as members of a gens (ie. family or clan)
Part of Ancient Egyptian royal titulary; one of the pharaoh's five names.
No hi ha cap exemple disponible per a cap sinònim
1There were still black-furred nomen prowling in the woods, and frowth giants.
2You still think girls get moist when they hear arcane nomen-clature.
3Sancte Petre!-Paternoster, qui es in coelis, sanctificeter nomen tuum; adveniat regnum tu-
4Sixteen hundred years ago, nomen and Toth had died here by the uncounted score.
5His full name was Quintus Vergilius Varro, but all knew the youth by his nomen.
6These were called the prænomen (forename), nomen (name), cognomen (surname), and agnomen (added name).
7The nomen proper, Cornelius, declares the wearer of it to belong to the illustrious gens Cornelia.
8Dominus dedit, Dominus abstulit, sit nomen Domini benedictum.
9Is it a nomen or a verbum?
10Velut unguentum diffunditur nomen tuum &c.
11The tenor bell at Welford, Berks, has the inscription, "Missi de celis habeo nomen Gabrielis 1596."
12The nomen was put after the prænomen, to mark the gens, and commonly ended in ius; as Cornelius, Fabius.
13Such a "Clarum et venerabile nomen gentibus?"
14Occasio avaritiae nomen pauperum.
15Substantiae nomen significat essentiam cui competit sic esse, id est per se esse; quod tamen esse non est ipsa ejus essentia.
16In speaking of the foregoing Ausonius writes, "Cujus erat facies in qua paterque materque cognosci possint, nomen traxit ab illis."