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"scilicet" Definitions
  1. that is to say : SPECIFICALLY, NAMELY

32 Sentences With "scilicet"

How to use scilicet in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "scilicet" and check conjugation/comparative form for "scilicet". Mastering all the usages of "scilicet" from sentence examples published by news publications.

July 31, 1677, I sold my bokes to Mr. Littlebury, scilicet when my impostume in my heade did breake.
From then on, names officially consisted only of forename and surname, without von or titles, scilicet Franz Ferdinand Hohenberg. Most simply ignored this Decree.
He was martyred around 1100 in Sweden. Some sources claim that he was murdered by a Finnish slave. See also . mention some Henry as the Bishop of Uppsala (Henricus scilicet Upsalensis) in 1129, participating in the consecration of the saint's newly built church.
Annales Placentini in Monumenta Germaniae Historica Volume 18, p. 569: Eodem tempore maxima discordia erat inter cardinales Rom(a)e de electione pastoris in civitate Viterbii, et ibi sunt tantum VII cardinales: tres tenent unam viam scilicet dominus Johannes Gaytanus [Orsini], Jacobus de Sivello et Mattheus Rubeus [Orsini]; alii tres scilicet dominus Anserius [Pantaleoni], Symonus de Tursso et dominus Guillelmus cardinales tenent aliam viam.... Episcopus vero Sabinensis cardinalis tenet mediam viam nec declinat ad unam nec ad aliam. The seventh was the Bishop of Sabina, Bertrand de Saint- Martin, who favored neither party. The chronicle lists Symonus de Tursso (de Brion) as present, and does not mention Geoffrey d'Alatri at all; it is Geoffrey who was present and Simon who was absent.
In historical records the village was first mentioned in 1239 (in form Poonh).„...et nostro quasdam terras seu possessiones nostras cum suis servitoribus condicionariis, retiferis scilicet et falconariis perpetuo et irrevocabiliter archiepiscopo et archiepiscopatui Strigoniensi, videlicet Poonh iuxta villam Chethen in comitatu Nitriensi...” (DLDF 248088 p. 11 transcript from 1465; 248089 p. 9; 25025; Prímási Levéltár, AR A. n.
Sédat, Jacques, "Scilicet", Gale Dictionary of Psychoanalysis. Initially announced as a triannual publication, the fallout of May 1968, which had a direct bearing on Lacan's teaching at the École Normale Supérieure, delayed the editing of the second issue and the rhythm continued to be sporadic until its final issue.Lacan, Jacques, "Liminaire, En manière d’excuse à l’École ", Appendix 2 to Autres écrits, 2001, p. 592-595. Scilicet is important in the history of the psychoanalytic movement because of the major texts of Lacan that featured in each of its issues: "Proposition of 9 October on the Psychoanalyst of the School" (issue 1); "Radiophonie" (issue 2/3); "L’étourdit" (issue 4); "…ou pire" (issue 5) and finally the lectures and interviews that Lacan gave at Yale University, Columbia University, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1975 (issue 6/7).
"Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal (National Library of Portugal)—Codices Alcobacenses ( ); [BN: cod. alc. CLI / 64, Page. 330] Translated ("Nota de como has de poer o ramo de natal, scilicet: Em vespera de natal, buscarás huu grande Ramo de loureiro verde, e colherás muitas laranjas vermelhas e poer lhas has metidas pelos ramos que dele procedem specificadamente segundo já viste. E em cada hua laranja, poeras hua candea.
Prince Georg was born at Artstetten Castle in the community of Artstetten-Pöbring, Lower Austria, on 25 April 1929. He was the second son of Maximilian, Duke of Hohenberg and Countess Elisabeth von Waldburg zu Wolfegg und Waldsee. Following the collapse of the monarchy, all Austrian titles were abolished by law in 1919. From then on, names consisted only of forename and surname, without von or titles, scilicet Georg Hohenberg.
Superius > vero tetrachordum, quod est diatessaron, requirunt, ut unusquisque suam > speciem diapason teneat, per quam evagando, sursum ac deorsum libere currat. > Cui scilicet diapason plerumque exterius additur, qui emmelis, id est, aptus > melo vocatur. > Sciendum quoque, quod Dorius maxime proto regitur, similiter Phrygius > deutero, Lydius trito, mixolydius tetrardo. Quos sonos in quibusdam > cantilenis suae plagae quodammodo tangendo libant, ut plaga proti tangat > protum, deuteri deuterum, triti tritum, tetrardi tetrardum.
Established at a time of considerable institutional invention, Scilicet adopted the editorial strategy of the Bourbaki group, publishing unsigned articles in an attempt to "overcome the narcissism of small differences" and to open the doors to analysts from outside the EFP whose institutional affiliations might otherwise discourage them from contributing. However, issue 2/3 did carry a list of twenty names of contributors to issue 1. The same editorial policy was later adopted by other psychoanalytic journals.
In 2006, Scilicet was revived for the preparatory work of the fifth congress of the World Association of Psychoanalysis in Rome on "The Name-of-the-Father". A second volume, for the sixth congress in Buenos Aires, appeared in print as "The Objects a in the Psychoanalytic Experience", published by the Collection rue Huysmans (2008). This was followed by "Semblants and Sinthome", the 2010 Paris congress, and then "The Symbolic Order in the Twenty-First Century" (Buenos Aires, 2012).
Scilicet is an academic journal that was established in 1968 by Jacques Lacan as the official French-language journal of the École Freudienne de Paris. Published by Éditions du Seuil, it appeared intermittently until the double issue of 1976. The title was revived in 2006 to distribute preparatory texts for the congresses of the World Association of Psychoanalysis and is now published in both French and Spanish. The new series began with a digital volume and has since extended to four print volumes.
He gets into the bath and eats of the > flesh that is brought to him, with his people standing around and sharing it > with him. He also imbibes the broth in which he is bathed, not from any > vessel, nor with his hand, but only with his mouth. When this is done right > according to such unrighteous ritual, his rule and sovereignty are > consecrated.Est igitur in boreali et ulteriori Vltoniae parte, scilicet apud > Kenelcunil, gens quaedam, quae barbaro nimis et abhominabili ritu sic sibi > regem creare solet.
A fragment from Sallust's Histories omits mention of Catiline in describing the death: Gratidianus "had his life drained out of him piece by piece, in effect: his legs and arms were first broken, and his eyes gouged out."Sallust, Histories 1.44M: ut in M. Mario, cui fracta prius crura brachiaque et oculu effossi, scilicet ut per singulos artus expiraret. A more telling omission is that the execution of Gratidianus is not among Sallust's allegations against Catiline in his Bellum Catilinae ("The War of Catiline").Jane W. Crawford, M. Tullius Cicero.
It became quite rare by the latter 20th century, but more recently has been revived by folk musicians. An image of the celestial monochord was used on the 1952 cover of Anthology of American Folk Music by Harry Everett Smith and in the 1977 book The Cosmographical Glass: Renaissance Diagrams of the Universe (p. 133) by S. K. Heninger, Jr., . A reproduction of the monochordum mundanum (mundane monochord) illustration from page 90 of Robert Fludd's "Utriusque Cosmi, Maioris scilicet et Minoris, Metaphysica, Physica, Atque Technica Historia" ("Tomus Primus"), 1617, was used as the cover art for Kepler Quartet's 2011 audio CD, Ben Johnston: String Quartets Nos.
Page 60. His report is buttressed by the foundation charter of the Archdiocese of Prague (1086), which traces the eastern border of the archdiocese, as established in 973, along the Bug and Styr (or Stryi) rivers.The entire vicinity of Krakow was to be administered from Prague: "...ad orientem hos fluvios habet terminos: Bug scilicet et Ztir cum Cracouua civitate provintiaque cui Uuag nomen est cum omnibus regionibus ad predictam urbem pertinentibus, que Cracouua est". Abraham ben Jacob, who travelled in Eastern Europe in 965, remarks that Boleslaus II of Bohemia ruled the country "stretching from the city of Prague to the city of Krakow".
"Reconsidering Shakespeare's Monument". Review of English Studies 48 (May 1997), 175. In 1725, Alexander Pope's edition of Shakespeare's works included the first fairly accurate engraving of the monument, made by George Vertue in 1723. A drawing of the monument in situ by Vertue also survives.Price, 177 An account by John Aubrey, written in the early 1670s (but possibly based on observations made a decade or two earlier), describes Shakespeare as wearing "a Tawny satten doublet I thinke pinked and over that a black gowne like an Under-gratuates at Oxford, scilicet the sleeves of the gowne doe not cover the armes, but hang loose behind". The monument was restored in 1748–49.
In most early sources the duplex longa has twice the body of a longa, but before 1250 there is often no clear difference of shape and the presence of the duplex longa is instead merely suggested by a greater distance between the notes in the tenor (in score notation), caused by the greater number of notes in the upper parts . See "Mensural notation" for examples.100x100px The name for this note in European languages is derived from two of the three Latin names, either maxima or larga. (On "larga" as a term, see , 30–31 : "Nomina vero ipsarum sunt haec, scilicet larga, longa, brevis, semibrevis et minima".) In modern theoretical contexts, it is occasionally called an octuple whole note .
De deorum imaginibus libellus, chapter 6, > "De Plutone": homo terribilis in solio sulphureo sedens, sceptrum regni in > manu tenens dextra: sinistra, animam constringes, cui tricipitem Cerberum > sub pedibus collocabant, & iuxta se tres Harpyias habebat. De throno aurê > eius sulphureo quatuor flumina manabunt, quae scilicet Lethum, Cocytû, > Phlegethontem, & Acherontem appellabant, & Stygem paludem iuxta flumina > assignabant. This work derives from that of the Third Vatican Mythographer, possibly one Albricus or Alberic, who presents often extensive allegories and devotes his longest chapter, including an excursus on the nature of the soul, to Pluto.The questions of authorship involving the De deorum imaginibus libellus and the Liber Ymaginum deorum ("Book of Images of the Gods") are vexed; Ronald E. Pepin, The Vatican Mythographers (Fordham University Press, 2008), pp. 7–9.
"Dies iræ" (Day of Wrath), a 13th-century Latin hymn describing the day of judgment and used in the Roman liturgy as the sequence for the Requiem Mass for centuries, is sometimes attributed to Malabranca, who was a composer of ecclesiastical chants and offices.Pierre Mandonnet, OP, "Order of Preachers," The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 12 (New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911), Accessed 15 February 2013; Frater Mandonnet cites G. Salvadori, "De Remigio Girolami, IV," Scritti vari di Filologia (Rome, 1901), p. 488): ...item in eloquentia, et ad dictandum et ad sermonicinandum et ad predicandum et ad proloquendum et ad monendum et etiam ad cantandum, non solum in voce seg magis in cantandi arte, sed et plus in cantabilium cantuum inventione, scilicet hymnorum, sequentiarum, responsorium et officiorum universaliter.
After the fall of the Roman Empire, A Coruña still possessed a commercial port connected with foreign countries, but contacts with the Mediterranean were slowly replaced by the European Atlantic front. But the process of deurbanization that followed the fall of the Romans also affected the city. Between the 7th and 8th centuries the city remained a small town of labourers and sailors who worked mainly on the beach. The Iriensian Chronicle, written in the 11th century, names Faro do Burgo, one of A Coruña's historical names, as one of the dioceses that King Miro granted to the episcopate of Iria Flavia in the year 572: "Mirus Rex Sedi suae Hiriensi contulit Dioceses, scilicet Morratium, Salinensem, (...) Bregantinos, Farum..." [King Miro granted to his iriensi headquarters the dioceses of Morrazo, Salnés (...).
Clüver was an antiquary, who was given a special appointment at Leiden as geographer and put in charge of the university's library, but his life's project, it developed, was a general study of the geography of Antiquity, based not only on classical literary sources, but – and this was his contribution – supplemented by wide travels and local inspections. He became virtually the founder of historical geography. Clüver's first work, in 1611, concerning the lower reaches of the Rhine and its tribal inhabitants in Roman times (Commentarius de tribus Rheni alveis, et ostiis; item. De Quinque populis quondam accolis; scilicet de Toxandris, Batavis, Caninefatibus, Frisiis, ac Marsacis) touched a source of national pride among the Seventeen Provinces, for the Dutch were enjoying a twelve years' truce in their Eighty Years' War of liberation.
Et dominus Octavianus diaconus cardinalis imposuit mantum meliori homini de curia, ut dixit, scilicet domino Raynaldo episcopo ostiensi; et dictus est Papa Alexander quartus, circa Nativitatem Domini factus, ita quod in festo sancti Thomae Cantuariensis Ferrariae rumores audivimus. He also says that the papal mantle was placed on the shoulders of Cardinal de' Conti by Cardinal Ottaviano Fieschi; this is unusual since the privilege of investing the new pope with the mantle belongs to the senior Cardinal-deacon, who was not Cardinal Ottaviano. Perhaps we are invited by Fra Salimbene to assume that Cardinal Ottaviano was the one who made the Compromise choice. But it can also be imagined that this tale of Fra Salimbene was one told in front of a fire in a monastic refectory, during a cardinalatial visit to Parma.
He was still with the royal forces at Andújar, witnessing a royal charter issued on 17 July, but it is not clear if he participated in the successful sieges of Baeza and Almería later that summer. There is no contemporary record of his presence with the royal army after Andújar,Fletcher, "Diplomatic and the Cid", 319. On 18 November 1153, Alfonso VII granted "to my faithful vassal [Ponce,] for the good and faithful service which you did me in Almería and in many other places in both the Christian and Muslim regions", the castle of Albuher near Villamanrique de Tajo.Recuero Astray, "Donaciones de Alfonso VII", 904–05: meo fideli vasallo ... pro bono et fideli servicio quod mihi fecistis in Almaria et in aliis locis multis in partibus scilicet christanorum atque sarracenorum.
In the sirventes Calega celebrates the coming of Conradin and his army and the efforts of Arrigo di Castiglia, son of Ferdinand III of Castile, in early 1268 against the Angevins. Calega was a staunch Ghibelline. A Genoese document from March that year records the planning stages of Genoese involvement in Conradin's war against the Angevins, stating that "the great men (magnates) of Genoa, that is, the Spinola, the Doria, the Castello and others came to talk amongst themselves, giving each other honour as seemed fitting" (magnates Janue scilicet de Spinulis de Auria de Castello et alii venerunt ad cum loquentes sibi et faciendo sibi honorem sicut decuit). Calega and Corrado were both councillors of the Genoese commune at the time and were doubtless among those who flocked to Conradin's banner.
Eric's sudden appearance in the Chronicle, first noted by the D-text, is a puzzling one, lacking any information as to how or why he emerged on the scene. As hinted above, the Life of the Scottish saint Cathróe of Metz, written by a cleric (Reimann) who claimed to have been a former pupil of the saint, may possibly shed some light on his background. St Cathróe, a Scottish saint with a Brythonic name, visited a certain King Eric (Erichus) in York as he proceeded southwards from his native Strathclyde and Cumbria to Loida civitas, sometimes identified as Leeds, on the boundary with Cumbria, ultimately intending to go to West France.He was escorted by a certain nobleman called Gunderic '[...] a quo perducitur ad regem Erichium in Euroacum urbem, qui scilicet rex habebat conjugem, ipsius Divini Cathroë propinquam'.
The entire vicinity of Krakow was to be administered from Prague: "…ad orientem hos fluvios habet terminos: Bug scilicet et Ztir cum Cracouua civitate provintiaque cui Uuag nomen est cum omnibus regionibus ad predictam urbem pertinentibus, que Cracouua est". Abraham ben Jacob, who travelled in Eastern Europe in 965, remarks that Boleslaus II of Bohemia ruled the country "stretching from the city of Prague to the city of Kraków".Relacja Ibrahima Ibn Ja'kuba z podróży do krajów słowiańskich w przekazie Al-Bekriego. Kraków, 1946 (MPH NS. 1). Page 50. In the 970s, Mieszko I of Poland took over the region: the Primary Chronicle infers this when reporting that Vladimir the Great conquered the Red Cities from the Lyakhs in 981. He took over the Red Ruthenian strongholds in his military campaign on the border with the land of Lendians.
Accounts of his death form the main sources of information about Northman. John of Worcester related that: > In July Cnut married Ælfgifu, that is Emma, Æthelred's widow, and at > Christmas, when he was at London, ordered the treacherous Ealdorman Eadric > (ducem Edricum) to be killed in the palace because he feared that some day > he would be entrapped by Eadric's treachery, just as Eadric's former lords > Æthelred and Edmund, that is Ironside, were frequently deceived, and he > ordered his body to be thrown over the city wall, and left unburied. > Ealdorman Northman, son of Ealdorman Leofwine, that is brother of Leofric > the Ealdorman (dux Northmannus filius Leofuuini ducis, frater scilicet > Leofrici comitis), and Brihtric, son of Ælfheah, governor of Devon, were > killed with him, although blameless. The king made Leofric ealdorman (ducem) > in place of his brother Northman, and afterwards held him in great > affection.
On 18 November 1152 Alfonso VII rewarded Ponce "my faithful vassal, for the good and faithful [military] service which [he] rendered me at Almería and in many other places, naturally in the provinces of the Christians and also in those of the Saracens"Barton (1992), 247: uobis comiti domno Poncio [to you, Count Don Ponce,] meo fideli uassallo ... pro bono et fideli seruitio quod michi fecistis in Almaria et in alliis locis multis, in partibus scilicet Christianorum atque Sarracenorum. by granting him the castle of Albuher (or Alboer, modern Villamanrique on the Tagus) in the extreme south of his dominions, between Oreja, in whose conquest Ponce had participated in 1139, and Almoguera. In 1153 Ponce gained the tenancy of Toro on the river Duero in the region of Zamora near the border with Portugal, an important defensive position. In 1156 the town of Cepeda, seventy kilometres to the southwest, was attached to the tenancy of Salamanca.
Pedro the Ceremonious gave Barcelona its Consulate of the Sea saying he would be in the same form as that of Mallorca, "sub ea scilicet forma qua concessum est civitati Maioricarum". Customs adapted from Valencia in Mallorca, and from there in Barcelona.Capmany, p. 317-318 Capmany says that because of these adaptation the first seven chapters dealt with matters that were only useful for Valencia Sea consuls, and several laws and ordinances from Barcelona were added indiscriminately, adding that the rest of chapters of the ordinations that form the biggest part of the Book of the Consulate of the Sea was not copied from Mallorca and Valencia, but was compiled thereof from Barcelona customs known as Free Consulate of the Sea and being those Barcelona's customs compiled before the Valencian ordinations by early printers, have caused confusion in later authors, who have given a Valencian origin when in fact they have originated in Barcelona.
"Sed majoris est Agape, quia per hanc adolescentes tui cum sororibus dormiunt, appendices scilicet gulae lascivia et luxuria" (Tertullian, De Jejuniis, 17, quoted in Gibbons: Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire). Clement of Alexandria also mentions abuses (Stromata III,2) and the editor comments: "The early disappearance of the Christian agapæ may probably be attributed to the terrible abuse of the word here referred to, by the licentious Carpocratians". Augustine of Hippo also objected to the continuance in his native North Africa of the custom of such meals, in which some indulged to the point of drunkenness, and he distinguished them from proper celebration of the Eucharist: "Let us take the body of Christ in communion with those with whom we are forbidden to eat even the bread which sustains our bodies."Letter 22, 1:3 He reports that even before the time of his stay in Milan, the custom had already been forbidden there.
According to a historical testimony by Landolfo Luniore (1077-1137), known as Landolfo di San Paolo, in his Historia Mediolanensis [History of Milan], it seems that the church of Sancta Maria ad Portam already existed before the 12th century in the same place where it stands today. It would have served as a minor church, though, since it was neither a Decuman church nor the place of litanies. Landolfo in the same work reported that on May 7, 1105, during the demolition of the pre-existing church, precious relics were discovered, among which were a part of Jesus’ burial clothes and his Holy Shroud, a piece of the stone on which the angel who announced the resurrection was seated, a splinter of the Holy Cross, and a fragment of Mary's dress. > "Putavi non pretereundum scilentio, quod durante lite Grosulani, scilicet > 1105 7 idus maiis, invente sunt reliquie pretiose in Ecclesia Sancte Marie > ad Portam". ["I thought that cannot be passed silently that during the > Grosulani dispute, of course, May 7, 1105, there were precious relics at the > Church Sancte Marie ad Portam"] Another historian named Torre mentions the same relics in 1674, and also records the presence of the venerated bones of sub-deacons, Saints Casto and Polimio.

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