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Example sentences for "glosses"

Lexicographically close words:
gloss; glossarial; glossaries; glosse; glossed; glossiness; glossing; glossopharyngeal; glossy; glottal
  1. A writer of glosses or of a glossary; a commentator; a scholiast.

  2. Of or pertaining to glosses or to a glossary; containing a glossary.

  3. A writer of glosses or comments; a commentator.

  4. I do not mean that 'marginal glosses have frequently found their way into the text':--that points to a wholly improbable account of the matter.

  5. As another instance of ancient Glosses introduced to help out the sense, the reading of St. John ix.

  6. Many of these glosses are rank, patent, palpable.

  7. Moreouer, that it was meet to euerie man to vnderstand the scriptures in the true and plaine sense, & none bound to glosses of anie other sense, vpon anie necessitie of saluation.

  8. There may be others of very early date, which have been hitherto classified as old Welsh or Breton, such as the Lament for Geraint, King of Devon, generally attributed to Llywarch Hen, and certain glosses in Latin MSS.

  9. Apart from a few redactional glosses the chapter as a whole belongs to P.

  10. The texts and glosses were various and confused.

  11. These glosses or re-statements shall be considered later on, whenever these additions or substitutions are of sufficient interest.

  12. Hence the glosses of the Trattato will have, in the following collection of sayings, to be removed from my text, and the statements of the Dialogo will have to be ignored in my text.

  13. But no such glosses were introduced into the Vita-proper, either as to this, or indeed, perhaps, any other point.

  14. It will appear that the Dialogo was in part composed to perform an office towards those doctrinal chapters of the Vita, similar to that performed by the glosses in and towards the text of the Trattato.

  15. Among his papers in Berlin are found many billets and loose memoranda bearing on the subject, without date, but grouped as to periods by Schindler himself and provided with occasional glosses touching their contents.

  16. The article angered Beethoven, as is evidenced by his marginal glosses on the copy of the journal which he read, now in the possession of Dr.

  17. The glosses are two in number: "Oh, you arch ass!

  18. The very locusts and crickets of a summer day are but later or earlier glosses on the Dherma Sastra of the Hindoos, a continuation of the sacred code.

  19. It is a complete copy, with copious glosses in Modern Irish, the more important of which are printed below on pp.

  20. Sir, one feels humbled by the necessity of this discussion,--that at this late day he should be called to vindicate the Constitution of his country against glosses and interpretations in the interest of Slavery.

  21. Society conveniently glosses over these crimes with mild names, but the crime is just the same.

  22. Defn: A writer of glosses or comments; a commentator.

  23. Defn: A writer of glosses or of a glossary; a commentator; a scholiast.

  24. Defn: Of or pertaining to glosses or to a glossary; containing a glossary.

  25. Though the theory of explanatory interpolations of marginal glosses into the text of the N.

  26. An end would be made of all glosses and emendations of the text over which there have been so many disputes, and there would be an excision of all parts that have been added by later hands.

  27. Many of his glosses appear again in other compilations, as in the Cod.

  28. The study of glosses spread through the publication, in 1573, of the bilingual glossaries by H.

  29. His collection includes glosses from Plautus and Lucilius.

  30. The first great glossary or collection of various glosses and glossaries is that of Salomon, bishop of Constance, formerly abbot of St Gall, who died A.

  31. Just as grammar developed, so we see the original form of the glosses extend.

  32. The antiquity and importance of these glosses for philology may be realized from the fact that the Latin translation of the Lex Salica probably dates from the latter end of the 5th century.

  33. The first Hebrew author known to have used glosses was R.

  34. A fourth arrangement collected the glosses according to the first two letters of the lemmata, as in the Corpus Glossary and in the still earlier Cod.

  35. Many of these glosses may have been written a generation or more earlier than the compilation of the archetype glossary.

  36. The reading of a few lines of text, the punctuation, the elaborate glosses full of wellnigh incomprehensible abbreviations; all dictated slowly enough for a class of a hundred or more to take down every word.

  37. And we must take heed lest with such dangerous glosses our minds be turned away from the sacrament's power and virtue, and faith perish entirely through such false security in the outwardly completed sacrament.

  38. The glosses are the earliest form of commentary on the Bible.

  39. The glosses of the canon law are the more or less authoritative comments of the teachers, and date from the time when the study of the canon law became a part of the theological curriculum.

  40. Part of this small Greek surplus is due to the translators’ expansion or paraphrase of briefer Hebrew originals, or consists of glosses that they found in the Hebrew MSS.

  41. Again, a number of what are transparent glosses or marginal notes on the Hebrew text are lacking in the Greek, because the translator of the latter did not find them on the Hebrew manuscript from which he translated.

  42. Greek omits but to priests adds the sons of Levi, an instance of how ready later hands have been to add prose glosses to the poetry.


  43. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "glosses" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.