We have no meanings for "roman à" in our records yet.
1 Philosophy meant to the Roman a guide to the direction of life.
2 They both carried flashlights, and Roman a bolt cutter.
3 This attitude made the Roman a very tolerant man.
4 What makes a Roman a Roman, a Greek a Greek, and a Persian a Persian?
5 The old woman after him gave Roman a nervous look as she handed over her money.
6 She poured Roman a glass of milk and gestured at her own abdomen, spinning the finger.
7 Chasseur made her excuses and gave Roman a parting look and that look was really a prayer.
8 You never saw so Roman a banquet; but withal my virt'u, the bridegroom seemed the most venerable piece of antiquity.
9 Is it a sound criticism to call the Romans a nation of grammarians?
10 The battering-ram and movable towers resembled those of the Romans a thousand years later.
11 But before the Romans a British stronghold existed here.
12 The annihilation of the Senones had given to the Romans a considerable tract of the Adriatic coast.
13 He who had laughed so much at others afforded the Romans a comedy at his own expense.
14 Had the Romans a word for unworldly?
15 And very much the same sad fate had happened to the Romans a little before St. Paul's time.
16 The prudence of the victorious Pyrrhus led him to send to the Romans an embassy with proposals of peace.
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