- tative
- ex·hor·tative;
English syllables. 2014.
English syllables. 2014.
Georgian grammar — The Georgian language belongs to the South Caucasian or Kartvelian family. Some of its characteristics are akin to those of Slavic languages such as its system of verbal aspect, but Georgian grammar is remarkably different from Indo European… … Wikipedia
Vietnamese syntax — Vietnamese, like many languages in Southeast Asia, is an analytic (or isolating) language. [Comparison note: As such its grammar relies on word order and sentence structure rather than morphology (in which word changes through inflection).… … Wikipedia
Milton, John — (1608 1674) English poet, political figure, and au thor of tracts on political and religious issues. Though his life is to tally contained in the 17th century and so falls chronologically into a post Renaissance age, his prodigious mastery of… … Historical Dictionary of Renaissance
Cartographie (robotique) — Pour les articles homonymes, voir cartographie (homonymie). En robotique, la cartographie vise à doter un robot autonome de la capacité de construire ou d utiliser une carte pour se situer dans son environnement. Introduction La cartographie en… … Wikipédia en Français
Caro (Kara), Joseph — (1488 1575) Spanish talmudic codifier. He was born in Toledo, then settled in Turkey after the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492. In 1536 he left Turkey for Safed where he was the head of a large yeshivah. His Bet Yoseph (House of… … Dictionary of Jewish Biography
Isseües, Moses (Rema) — (c. 1525 72) Polish codifier. He was born in Krakow, where he later founded and maintained a yeshivah. When Joseph Caro s code, Bet Yoseph, appeared, Isserles wrote the Darkhe Mosheh, which explained the views of Ashkenazi scholars. After the… … Dictionary of Jewish Biography
Arthashastra — (c. 300 C.E.) The Arthashastra, the “Authoritative Treatise on Worldly Affairs,” is generally attributed to Kauti lya (Chanakya) (c. 300 B.C.E.), the minister of the famous Chandragupta Maurya kingdom, although it was apparently expanded at a… … Encyclopedia of Hinduism
Durga — Durga (One who is hard to approach) is one of the major Indian goddesses, named perhaps for her ferocious nature. Her role is to intervene on behalf of the gods to defeat demons who threaten the cosmos. The Devimahatmya, the most famous… … Encyclopedia of Hinduism
meditation — The term dhyana (meditation) is used by Jains (see JAINISM), Buddhists, and Hindus, with somewhat different technical meanings. The Jains may very well have been the first to practice meditation. Their tradition does not preserve a great… … Encyclopedia of Hinduism
PERI, Jacopo — (1561 1633) Jacopo Peri, a Florentine composer, singer, and instrumentalist, is best known as the creator of dramatic recitative, a form of monody that made possible the development of opera. Born in Rome, Peri moved to Florence at a young age.… … Renaissance and Reformation 1500-1620: A Biographical Dictionary