history
41History — Genuine history as inherited from ancient Greek and Roman historians (e.g., of the sort written by Thucydides) declined after Prokopios of Caesarea (q.v.), to be replaced largely by the chronicle (q.v.). Nevertheless, the influence of… …
42History — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. History Channel, une chaîne de télévision sur l histoire HIStory un album anthologie Michael Jackson history (Unix), un utilitaire en ligne de commande… …
43history — noun /ˈhɪstəri,ˈhɪstri/ a) The aggregate of past events. History repeats itself if we don’t learn from its mistakes. b) The branch of knowledge that studies the past; the assessment of notable events. Holes in your pant pockets turn your coins… …
44history — noun (plural histories) 1》 the study of past events. 2》 the past considered as a whole. ↘the whole series of past events connected with someone or something. ↘an eventful past. 3》 a continuous, typically chronological, record of past… …
45history — noun 1) my interest in history Syn: the past, former times, historical events, the olden days, the old days, bygone days, long ago, yesterday, antiquity; literary days of yore, yesteryear 2) a history of the Boxer Rebellion Syn …
46history — noun 1) my interest in history Syn: the past, former times, the olden days, yesterday, antiquity 2) a history of the Civil War Syn: chronicle, archive, record, report, narrative, ac …
47history — his•to•ry [[t]ˈhɪs tə ri, ˈhɪs tri[/t]] n. pl. ries 1) why the branch of knowledge dealing with past events 2) why a continuous, systematic narrative of past events as relating to a particular people, country, period, person, etc., usu. written… …
48history — [15] Etymologically, history denotes simply ‘knowledge’; its much more specific modern meaning is decidedly a secondary development. Its story begins with Greek hístōr ‘learned man’, a descendant of Indo European *wid ‘know, see’, which also… …
49history — see history repeats itself happy is the country which has no history …
50history — [15] Etymologically, history denotes simply ‘knowledge’; its much more specific modern meaning is decidedly a secondary development. Its story begins with Greek hístōr ‘learned man’, a descendant of Indo European *wid ‘know, see’, which also… …