Synonymer & Anagram | Engelska ordet BIGA


BIGA

1

3

Antal bokstäver

4

Är palindrom

Nej

5
BI
BIG
GA
IG
IGA

35

49

35
AB
ABG
ABI
AG
AGB
AGI
AI
AIB


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Exempel på hur man kan använda BIGA i en mening

  • The auriga would drive a biga, the light vehicle powered by two horses, to transport some important Romans, mainly duces (military commanders).
  • Vigan, almost four centuries old, was once known as Kabigbigaan (from biga, a coarse, erect plant with large, ornate leaves that grows on riverbanks).
  • Marcus Lucilius Rufus, as triumvir monetalis in 101 BC, minted coins depicting Pallas on the obverse, and Victoria driving a biga on the reverse.
  • The Christmas parade is a direct descendant of late Medieval and Renaissance revivals of Roman Triumphs, which had music and banners, wagons filled with the spoils of war, and climaxed with the dux riding in a chariot, preferably drawn by two horses, and thus called the biga.
  • They were given such odd names as "Kabaong", because of coffin-shaped stones along the road; "Putol" because the trail was cut short by Mount Makiling; "Aptayin", because "apta" or fine shrimps were found in the brook; "Biga", because biga trees abounded there; and "Camballao", as in "kambal" (twin) because twin rivers divided the place.
  • He worked on restoring, completing and refinishing sculptures destined for the Museo Pio-Clementino and provided marble revetments and sculptural details for its interiors, notably the biga (two-horse chariot) assembled in 1788 from antique elements, in the sala del Biga of the Braccio Nuovo.
  • The name trigarium derives from triga, a three-horse chariot; compare the more common quadriga and biga, the four- and two-horse chariot.
  • The magistrate who presided over the games rode in a two-horse chariot (biga) and wore the traditional attire of the triumphing general (triumphator).
  • They are written as separate words in the standard orthography: bu tibu "a/the tree", i tiidi "(the) trees", mi ñima "(the) water", and they are omitted, for example, when the noun is preceded by a possessor or followed by kuli "each"; thus u nuu, "hand", ki biga "child", o joa "man" but e.
  • Luna in her biga drawn by horses or oxen was an element of Mithraic iconography, usually in the context of the tauroctony.
  • Some ludi circenses (games), which later the Romans partly took up, were different, such as mounted horse racing (bas-reliefs in Poggio Civitate), acrobatics by desultores, chariot racing (biga, triga and quadriga), which the auriga (slaves) practised with the reins tied behind their backs.
  • Catalogs include a type reference "HN" or "HN Italy" followed by the number: 434 for the silver didrachm with Athena on the obverse and Victory on a biga on the reverse, 435 for Minerva and the rooster, and 436 for Apollo and the bull.


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