¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Scazons
1. scazon [n] - See also: scazon
Lexicographical Neighbors of Scazons
Literary usage of Scazons
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Epigrams of Martial by Martial (1877)
"If you wish to be safe against detractors, go, my scazons, and pay your respects
to Apollinaris. If hee's not busy (be not troublesome), ..."
2. The Life of John Milton: Narrated in Connexion with the Political by David Masson (1881)
"The poem is one of condolence, and is written in Latin scazons, or " limping
measure,"—so called from a ... A POEM IN scazons. 0 thou muse that by choice ..."
3. The fables of Avianus by Flavius Avianus, Robinson Ellis (1887)
"The conclusion of Crusius that the author of two books, the latter imperfect, of
fables in Greek scazons, which were first published by Boissonade in 1844 ..."
4. Res Metrica: An Introduction to the Study of Greek & Roman Versification by William Ross Hardie (1920)
"... Philosophy again expressed in verse Pure iambi (Stoics — Clean- thes)
scazons (Phoenix ... verse intermixed in scazons ..."
5. The Journal of Philology by William George Clark, John Eyton Bickersteth Mayor, William Aldis Wright, Ingram Bywater, Henry Jackson (1872)
"In Catullus' iambics and scazons, which have the ... and by Martial in his many
hundred iambic lines, chiefly scazons, except that in catal. ..."
6. The Life and Letters of Edward A. Freeman, D.C.L., LL. D. by William Richard Wood Stephens (1895)
"And the metre is to my ear hobbling stuff, as perhaps scazons and ... But here
be scazons: I took the train from Bristol ti5 ..."