¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Nundines
1. nundine [n] - See also: nundine
Lexicographical Neighbors of Nundines
Literary usage of Nundines
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A manual of Roman antiquities by Thomas Swinburne Carr (1836)
"The Roman nundines (nundina) was an eight days' week of very ancient institution,
being ascribed to the Etruscans. ..."
2. The Journal of Classical and Sacred Philology by Joseph Barber Lightfoot, Fenton John Anthony Hort, John Eyton Bickersteth Mayor (1857)
"As for the nundines, these would fall on every three consecutive years ...
Ideler holds the sequence of the nundines to have persisted as free from ..."
3. The Journal of Classical and Sacred Philology by Joseph Barber Lightfoot, Fenton John Anthony Hort, John Eyton Bickersteth Mayor (1857)
"As for the nundines, these would fall on every three consecutive years ...
Ideler holds the sequence of the nundines to have persisted as free from ..."
4. The History of Rome by Barthold George Niebur, Julius Charles Hare, William Smith, Connop Thirlwall, Leonhard Schmitz (1860)
"OO long as the Etruscan calendar remained in use in civil life also, the nundines,
on which the country people came to the city, were at the same time the ..."
5. The History of Rome by Barthold Georg Niebuhr, William Smith, Leonhard Schmitz, Julius Charles Hare, Connop Thirlwall (1851)
"Oo long as the Etruscan calendar remained in use in civil life also, the nundines,
on which the country people came to the city, were at the same time the ..."
6. Roman Antiquities by Alexander Adam, John Richardson Major (1835)
"Those Ы the ]>Ubs were the nundines, on which the country people came in to
market; OB these days they appeared to plead their causes with the members of ..."
7. The Philological Museum by Julius Charles Hare (1832)
"If the nundines were consecrated to Saturn, as Plutarch states (Quaest. ...
16) says, on the authority of Granius Licinianus, that the nundines were the ..."