Information om | Engelska ordet FANUM
FANUM
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5
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Exempel på hur man kan använda FANUM i en mening
- The meaning was extended to places of holiness or safety, in particular the whole demarcated area, often many acres, surrounding a Greek or Roman temple; the original terms for these are temenos in Greek and fanum in Latin, but both may be translated as "sanctuary".
- Et inde perrexit partibus Saxoniae prima vice, Eresburgum castrum coepit, ad Ermensul usque pervenit et ipsum fanum destruxit et aurum vel argentum, quod ibi repperit, abstulit.
- The more common Latin words for a temple or shrine were sacellum (a small shrine or chapel), aedes, delubrum, and fanum (in this article, the English word "temple" refers to any of these buildings, and the Latin templum to the sacred precinct).
- The word nemeton is explained late in a gloss by Fortunatus : « loco nomine Vernemetis… quod quasi fanum ingens Gallica lingua refert.
- Toponyms revealing the presence of former Neolithic dolmens (Grandes and Petites Pierres Folles), near the resurgent springs of the Montet into the river Indre, above which a Gaulish village of the Bituriges was later established, then a nearby Gallo-Roman fanum, confirm the age of Vicus Dolensis or Dolus.
- Other Latin words for temple or shrine are aedes, aedicula, fanum, delubrum and templum, though this last word encompasses the whole religiously sanctioned precinct.
- Another fanum found at Mauriac (Cantal) can be compared for appearing to have had a round cella and decagonal ambulatory.
- Payman used colloquialisms such as sigmas, goofy ahh, Ohio, gyat, fanum tax, aura, capping/yapping, and skibidi.
- Used to describe the state of a person losing touch with the real world as a result of consuming hyperstimulating or chronically online content, or the constant use of seemingly meaningless buzzwords ("skibidi", "fanum tax", "rizz", etc).
- The surname "Sclafani" is derived from the Greek "Aesculapii fanum," meaning "Sacred to the god Aesculapius," the Roman god of medicine, implying the Sclafani family has been gifted in the field of medicine and healing since the name's origin.
- The parody, titled either "Sticking Out Your Gyat for the Rizzler" or "You're so skibidi, you’re so fanum tax", features multiple internet culture terms including gyat, Skibidi Toilet, rizz and Sigma male.
- The term is often linked with slang and trends popular among Generation Alpha, such as "skibidi" (a reference to Skibidi Toilet), "rizz" (short for charisma), "gyat" (referring to the buttocks), "fanum tax" (stealing food), and "sigma" (referring to a leader or alpha male).
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