A Rose with a hundred Petals HANC puto de proprio tinxit Sol aureus ortu aut unum ex radiis maluit esse suis; uel, si etiam centum foliis rosa Cypridis exstat, fluxit in hanc omni sanguine tota Venus.
The abbot Engelbert (De Ortu et Fine Imperii Romani) quotes Origen and Jerome to this effect, and proceeds himself to explain, from 2 Thess.
He was the author of a careful and elaborate classification of the parts of philosophy, entitled De ortu et divisione philosophiae.
In 1544 he published the De ortuet causis subterraneorum, in which he laid the first foundations of a physical geology, and criticized the theories of the ancients.
In little more than a month he had completed the necessary dissertation, De ortu et incremento foetus humani, and received his diploma.
A great many works are attributed to him, and he is copiously quoted by Agricola, principally in his De Ortu et Causis, apparently for the purpose of exposure.
While it is of the most general interest of all of his works, yet, from the point of view of pure science, De Natura Fossilium and De Ortu et Causis are works which deserve an equally important place.
In De Ortu et Causis he expends much thought on refutation of theories advanced by Avicenna and Albertus, but of the others we have found no mention, although their work is, from a chemical point of view, of considerable importance.
This list of German equivalents for Latin mineralogical terms was prepared by Agricola himself, and first appears in the 1546 collection of De Ortu et Causis, De Natura Fossilium, etc.
In ortu we see the same difficulty in knowing when to sound the aspirate which the cockney Englishman has.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "ortu" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.